The balsa core on the side deck is 1/2". But it tapers at the edge where the stanchion bases are fastened. Regardless, I would not bother with replacing core. Fill it with thickened epoxy (West 406 or 404 would do) or mash in chopped up fiberglass. I did all of mine this way many years ago. The deck should have been solid in these locations.
Deck Cores Showing Balsa
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/cores.htm
Cross section of hull/deck joint showing tapered core
http://dan.pfeiffer.net/10m/10m_hull_deck_joint.jpg
Dan Pfeiffer
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I recored mine at the midship stanchion base after I ripped it out colliding with a bow anchor. It would have been easier to layup about a dozen layers of glass but that gets heavy when you’re talking about a large area.
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I'd forget the plywood. No wood. You can seal it so it doesn't get wet but eventually it will still get wet. Coosa would be good or G10 on the extruded fiberglass you can get from McMaster Carr. Or lay up layers of fiberglass. But, the volume of a repair like this can be large enough to generate problematic heat. Use slow hardener and perhaps have a ziplock of ice water to set on top of the patch area while it cures if it is a hot day when you make the repair. This won't be a problem with the block of filler method, only for a larger volume epoxy fill or fiberglass fill. Like if it's several ounces of resin. And this would be best done with epoxy not polyester resin. Almost 2x stronger in mechanical bonding like this.
I'd also do the repair from below if possible. The outer skin is a much thicker and stronger layup of mat and roving. The inner was done by chopper gun. However, sometimes you have to work from above if there's damage or if access precludes working from below. Al's repair is a good example of that.
Regardless of where you access be sure to taper or bevel the edges of the repair area at the recommended 12:1 ratio. The stanchion base will see a lot of stress and needs to be strong. Although there is some argument for not making it too strong so if something snags a stanchion it pulls off the deck without leaving a large hole.
Dan Pfeiffer
On 2025-10-06 6:37 am, darin doherty wrote:
Thanks for the pics. They are quite helpful. I am trying to figure out the thickness of the core so I can get some coosa or plywood for under the stanchions and balsa or foam for the non structural area.Regards .Darin
On Sun, Oct 5, 2025, 22:15 JimR <jim.rom...@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks for the pictures Al. Question - how did you add the non-skid on top of the new patch to match the existing deck?Jim
On Sun, Oct 5, 2025 at 8:57 PM Al Taylor <awtayl...@gmail.com> wrote:
I recored mine at the midship stanchion base after I ripped it out colliding with a bow anchor. It would have been easier to layup about a dozen layers of glass but that gets heavy when you're talking about a large area.
On Oct 5, 2025, at 6:10 PM, darin doherty <usf...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Oct 5, 2025, at 10:15 PM, JimR <jim.rom...@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks for the pictures Al. Question - how did you add the non-skid on top of the new patch to match the existing deck?Jim
On Sun, Oct 5, 2025 at 8:57 PM Al Taylor <awtayl...@gmail.com> wrote:
I recored mine at the midship stanchion base after I ripped it out colliding with a bow anchor. It would have been easier to layup about a dozen layers of glass but that gets heavy when you’re talking about a large area.
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<image13.jpeg>On Oct 5, 2025, at 6:10 PM, darin doherty <usf...@gmail.com> wrote:Greeting song I have a stanchion that it seems to be on a bad piece of coring in the deck and is very loose. So I need to rebuild underneath that stanchion and rebet it and all that good stuff. I was wondering if anybody use it any of the modern materials for the core under the stanchions to giving more support and how thick. Thanks a lot. Darin--P10 CharisTitusville FL.
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