--
You can lead me to the water, but not away from it.
Using plain old barn-siding plywood with a water repellant brushed on is not
going to
produce acceptable results, FRP matting or not.
Is anybody else having trouble buying marine plywood? That could be an ominous
development.
________
Chuck Gould
Float and let float.
I have done this, you can cut out your old floor, leaving a 2" ridge
around the inside then fit a new floor over it, or you may be able
to get by with just replacing the rotted section. The important thing if
you do a partial replacement is to insure that everything below is dry
this can be time consuming. I spend a week of evenings with hair dryers
under the deck.
A great resource avbailable on the web is:
http://www.rotdoctor.com/ Great products that work and a nice FAQ.
I treated the wood floor with their products and instead of recarpeting
made a fitted piece of carpet that snaps in place over the floor. When
it get's wet I remove the carpet and let it and the deck dry
seperately. After 2 years the deck is as strong as ever and no signs of
rot returning.
Hope this helps,
Ray
Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.
>
> 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home depot.
> You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do not need
> marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline applications.
Uh...what suddenly qualifies *you* to state whether marine grade ply should or
should not be used in boats?
--
Harry Krause
------------
Raise your IQ: eat gifted children.
If I am spec'ing plywood for a small boat, my first assumption is that much of
it will be in continuous contact with water. If that boat has a deck (or floor,
if you prefer), my assumption would be that it would be awash in water, from
water that splashed aboard, from water that collected in the bilges, from an
accumulation of rainwater while it was on its trailer with the drain plug
closed, et cetera.
> None these differences is important for a typical trailerboat floor,
> which for all intents and purposes is affected by weather in much the
> same way as a barn floor. It is covered by canvas most of the time,
> and is only lightly wetted (not submerged) when the boat is out. If the
> plywood is properly coated by epoxy, there should be zero water damage.
Fortunately, you are not in the boat building business. I've been on many small
boats where the deck was awash. I've seen the result of using less than marine
plywood in boats, even on boats where the ply was skinned in fiberglass.
--
Harry Krause
------------
A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away....
While I don't agree with hkrause's snooty little flame, you are wrong about the
glues used in plywood.
The same glue is used for marine and exterior grade ply. The main difference
between the 2 is the quality of the veneers, and the fact that marine is supposed
to have no interior voids.
Maguire
Igor wrote:
> hkr...@capu.net <hkr...@capu.net> wrote:
> * Igor wrote:
> *
> * >
> * > 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home depot.
> * > You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do not need
> * > marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline applications.
> *
> * Uh...what suddenly qualifies *you* to state whether marine grade ply should or
> * should not be used in boats?
>
> This is about facts, not qualifications.
>
> The difference between marine grade and exterior grade (besides the
> fact that the marine plywood has no internal voids, which is not that
> important for a floor) is in how they handle continuous contact with
> water. Marine grade plywood uses glues (phenolic based, for instance),
> which resist CONTINUOUS water presence better than the glues used
> for exterior grade plywood.
>
My question was in no way snotty. Igor is new to boating and is rebuilding a
used boat he bought that has had a rough life. He is not qualified to pass
judgment on the reasons why marine ply is specified for boats. Further, there
are marine plys and there are marine plys, the veneers in the latter having had
some very special treatments in order to be more resistant to rot and therefore
more suited for boat use.
--
Harry Krause
------------
NY cops go bar-hopping; LA cops go night-clubbing.
Remove the floor first, or make sure you know what's under it first.
(Sorry, this seems obvious but you hear stories about people nailing holes
right through the fiberglass.) For example, in my boat, the gas tank is
right under the plywood. Can you imagine some poor fool trying to cut out
the strip of flooring there with a power saw?
Harry Krause wrote:
> * If I am spec'ing plywood for a small boat, my first assumption is that
> * much of it will be in continuous contact with water. If that boat has
> * a deck (or floor, if you prefer), my assumption would be that it would
> * be awash in water, from water that splashed aboard, from water that
> * collected in the bilges, from an accumulation of rainwater while it was
> * on its trailer with the drain plug closed, et cetera.
Igor wrote:
> For normal use though, such as a boat that sits on trailer but gets on
> water once in a while, gets a lot of water splashed on, and sits dry
> in a trailer, there is no need for marine grade plywood.
There is no basis on which you can justify the above claim, Igor, other than the
fact that you are too cheap to buy a sheet of marine ply.
> When you make a new boat, especially of bigger size, you don't know how
> it will be kept. So perhaps use of marine grade ply is indeed necessary.
> My boat is a trailerboat, and its floors are not submerged in water for
> any period of time. The new floor section is completely coated with 2
> generous coats of epoxy, and is laminated with fiberglass on the top side.
Oh...marine ply *is* necessary, except on boats you own.
> * > None these differences is important for a typical trailerboat floor,
> * > which for all intents and purposes is affected by weather in much the
> * > same way as a barn floor.
> *
> * Fortunately, you are not in the boat building business. I've been on many
> * small boats where the deck was awash. I've seen the result of using less
> * than marine plywood in boats, even on boats where the ply was skinned
> * in fiberglass.
>
> Was it epoxied or laminated with polyester?
Yup.
You ought to watch "ShipShape TV." The host frequently is pulling apart boats
with rotted marine ply underlay that was encased in fiberglass. Perhaps we'll
see your boat on that show soon..."Now here's an example of a fellow who thought
he could get away with fiberglass on one side of non marine ply..."
Are you telegenic?
--
Harry Krause
------------
$^&^# NO TERRIER
<hkr...@capu.net> wrote in message news:392AAD5C...@capu.net...
> Igor wrote:
> >
> > hkr...@capu.net <hkr...@capu.net> wrote:
> > * Igor wrote:
> > *
> > * >
> > * > 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home depot.
> > * > You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do not
need
> > * > marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline
applications.
> > *
> > * Uh...what suddenly qualifies *you* to state whether marine grade ply
should or
> > * should not be used in boats?
> >
> > This is about facts, not qualifications.
> >
> > The difference between marine grade and exterior grade (besides the
> > fact that the marine plywood has no internal voids, which is not that
> > important for a floor) is in how they handle continuous contact with
> > water. Marine grade plywood uses glues (phenolic based, for instance),
> > which resist CONTINUOUS water presence better than the glues used
> > for exterior grade plywood.
>
> If I am spec'ing plywood for a small boat, my first assumption is that
much of
> it will be in continuous contact with water. If that boat has a deck (or
floor,
> if you prefer), my assumption would be that it would be awash in water,
from
> water that splashed aboard, from water that collected in the bilges, from
an
> accumulation of rainwater while it was on its trailer with the drain plug
> closed, et cetera.
>
>
> > None these differences is important for a typical trailerboat floor,
> > which for all intents and purposes is affected by weather in much the
> > same way as a barn floor. It is covered by canvas most of the time,
> > and is only lightly wetted (not submerged) when the boat is out. If the
> > plywood is properly coated by epoxy, there should be zero water damage.
>
> Fortunately, you are not in the boat building business. I've been on many
small
> boats where the deck was awash. I've seen the result of using less than
marine
Maguire
I regret getting into a jargon critique but these things do have proper
names, and i see no good reason not to use them.
Ask Igor. That's what he did.
Harry Krause
------------
If you shoot a mime, should you use a silencer?
Maybe Igor bought his materials on the discard table.
$22 for plywood, glass, epoxy...of course it was only a four square foot patch.
--
Harry Krause
------------
I'd rather have a bottle in front of me than a frontal lobotomy.
> > 5) Cut out the piece to form.
> >
> > 6) Epoxy coated it with 2 coats of epoxy, using slow hardener, at 12-24
> > hours intervals.
> >
> > 7) Laminated the top side of plywood with one layer of fiberglass cloth.
> > You need to do it to make the floor more abrasion resistant.
>
> When you added the fiberglass on top of your plywood deck you may have
> set
> yourself up for another premature failure.
Ray
So, out of intellectual curiosity, what exactly is the difference?
I have seen in this thread claims that the glue is the same and that it
is different. Also that the wood is treated in some fashion, and that
it is not. And it seems that there is a strength difference which would
be of little matter when considering that flat surface upon which one
stands while in a small boat.
So if I buy a sheet of "green treated" plywood, would that do the job,
remembering this is not the hull we are building.
To net it out, glue: same or different?
veneer: treated or plain?
del cecchi
When doing my project I could not get it from the local Home Depot,
I was able to obtain it from a good lumber yard.
Igor wrote:
>
> Here's what I did. I think that what I did would suffice for any
> trailered boat. I had a problem with about 4 sq ft of my floor.
>
> 1) I cut out the old part of the floor.
>
> 2) Cleaned the area up.
>
> 3) Applied epoxy solution to a bulkhead that was showing some rot, but
> was not structurally critical.
So the rot can still spread? I didn't think epoxy would stop rot from
spreading?
>
> 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home depot.
> You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do not need
> marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline applications.
My Home Depot didn't have marine grade either..
> 5) Cut out the piece to form.
>
> 6) Epoxy coated it with 2 coats of epoxy, using slow hardener, at 12-24
> hours intervals.
>
> 7) Laminated the top side of plywood with one layer of fiberglass cloth.
> You need to do it to make the floor more abrasion resistant.
When you added the fiberglass on top of your plywood deck you may have
set
>Igor wrote:
>
>>
>> 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home depot.
>> You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do not need
>> marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline applications.
>
>Uh...what suddenly qualifies *you* to state whether marine grade ply should or
>should not be used in boats?
>
>
>--
>Harry Krause
Of course, it's time for the Krausetroll to intercede....right about
HERE.
If PT and bondo are 'good enough', why does this question get asked so often?
For the next person who feels this question, I suggest that researching a
question through dejanews.com would be a fruitful first step. Considerate, too.
Off your meds *again* Larry?
--
Harry Krause
------------
That man is richest whose pleasures are simplest.
* Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
Igor wrote:
> * This was the cause of the deck failure in my boat anyway, wherever the
> * cracks
> * were the rot was directly underneath.
>
> Hm, did you use polyester or epoxy? I think that epoxy penetrates wood
> deep enough so that a failure of fiberglass would not create way for
> moisture.
Can't say for sure since I don't know what resin's the builder used at
the
time, I imagine epoxy. But in other sections of the deck (that had not
been stressed) the fiberglass was still strongly bonded to the wood
underneath ( making removal a real pain). I removed all the fiberglass
from the deck and treated with the Dr Rot stuff. What amazed me was how
the wood absorbed this stuff, like a sponge. Then when it dried it was
incredibly strong.
Ray
Even funnier...the floor or transom fails, so the "repair" is to rebuild with
the same materials or methods as originally used. If I were patching a deck on
which the ply had failed, I would have purchased a chunk of XL ply as the base
material, a step up from plain old marine ply, glassed that on both sides and
epoxied any necessary screw holes.
The only "woodwork" I've done on our current little boat is an "attachment"
board inside the center console on which I've mounted a battery charger and an
additional electrical panel. It's a nice piece of white oak which I epoxied. I
then drilled the four machine screw holes that hold it onto the inside of the
console and the holes for the accessories. Then I painted the screw holes with
epoxy. The oak doesn't get wet at all, but it is living in a wet environment.
--
Harry Krause
------------
At least PeeWee wasn't TALKING during the movie!
<snip>
: For the next person who feels this question, I suggest that researching a
: question through dejanews.com would be a fruitful first step. Considerate,
: too.
Unfortunately, the bulk of the DejaNews archive is down, possibly for
several months. So expect more questions of a repetitive nature.
--
Rich Aubin
K5REA
"I often wonder whether we do not rest our hopes too much upon
constitutions, upon laws and upon courts. These are false hopes; believe
me, these are false hopes. Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women;
when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it . . ."
- Learned Hand, "The Spirit of Liberty" 1960
Sure. I was out an entire day last weekend, albeit on a canoe. Out an entire day
the week before and two days the week before that. I think I'll be out for a
while tomorrow, and, of course, over the weekend if the weather is decent.
If you bring a note from your parrot that sez you've taken your meds, I'd even
take you out on the boat. You can drive, but you have to promise to keep your
hands out of the wires and mechanicals. I am, however, planning to drill a
2-1/8" hole in the back deck to install a TC-W3 oil reservoir filler kit.
Perhaps you could catch the fiberglass dust.
Someone did pass along the coordinates of a place where the young babes sunbathe
topless and skinnydip. We could swing on by, and you could drool...even if you
can't remember why.
--
Harry Krause
------------
Her sweater was so tight that men could hardly breathe.
There are a few posters here who live for and in Deja, and probably have
downloaded the entire library of posts, going back to Creation, for
regurgitation.
--
Harry Krause
------------
CIA sabotaged Iraqi computers: gave 'em LINUX
Thoughts? Comments?
In article <392AAD5C...@capu.net>,
hkr...@capu.net wrote:
> Igor wrote:
> >
> > hkr...@capu.net <hkr...@capu.net> wrote:
> > * Igor wrote:
> > *
> > * >
> > * > 4) Bought a piece of 3/4 in EXTERIOR grade plywood from home
depot.
> > * > You absolutely need exterior grade. For a boat floor, you do
not need
> > * > marine grade, which is what is needed for below waterline
applications.
> > *
> > * Uh...what suddenly qualifies *you* to state whether marine grade
ply should or
> > Is it better to buy marine ply once or X grade plywood over and over?
> So, out of intellectual curiosity, what exactly is the difference?
>
> I have seen in this thread claims that the glue is the same and that it
> is different. Also that the wood is treated in some fashion, and that
> it is not. And it seems that there is a strength difference which would
> be of little matter when considering that flat surface upon which one
> stands while in a small boat.
>
> So if I buy a sheet of "green treated" plywood, would that do the job,
> remembering this is not the hull we are building.
>
> To net it out, glue: same or different?
> veneer: treated or plain?
"The Gougon Brothers on Boat Construction". page 41;
"If you are uncertain about the glue used in a laminate...boil a sample
in water for 30 minutes, dry it in an oven for an hour, and then repeat
the process. If the piece survives without delaminating, its adhesive is
probably good enough for marine construction."
Notice the word "probably".
--
DAVe
Is this where Steve pops in and tells us that the Gougeon Brothers forgot to
state whether the oven has to be turned on, and, if so, to what temperature?
Actually, I don't think the test is valid. While it would test the ability of a
laminate to resist boiling and baking, it doesn't subject it to compressive or
lateral forces or oilcanning under wet conditions. But I doubt marine ply is
tested thus, anyway.
--
Harry Krause
------------
Serial Killer: Person with difficult-to-meet needs
> Actually, I don't think the test is valid. While it would test the ability of a
> laminate to resist boiling and baking, it doesn't subject it to compressive or
> lateral forces or oilcanning under wet conditions. But I doubt marine ply is
> tested thus, anyway.
The boil test does not test the strength of the laminate, only the
heat/moisture resistance of the adhesive itself.
Notice: "If you are uncertain about the GLUE used in a laminate...If the
piece survives without delaminating, its ADHESIVE is probably good
enough for marine construction."
Have you considered a refesher course in remedial reading comprehension
lately?
--
DAVe
"OnLanier" <wrote >
>Do this; take a piece of CDX and a piece of marine ply
> and put both in a bucket of water. Come back the next day and
> have a look. If it is laminated in in fiberglass/epoxy, all the
> more reason to use marine grade
I think that if I had that much water in my boat to whereas the floor is
submershed, somehow I don't see why I would be concerned if the floor would
hold together at this time. I would be more worried about the hole in the
hull :-)), then sell it.
Jerry
Well Jimmy, if a topic was only allowed to be asked just once, period, this
newsgroup wouldn't have any post left. Besides, they have a neat little
feature that allows you to ignore some topics. But then again, I have seen
it mentioned here on more than one occasion so I, according to you, won't be
allowed to tell you how to use it.
Not everyone, including myself, do not know of all the "other" resources
available to us as I also work full time.
Jerry
What good is it if the adhesive works and the laminates are crappy.
--
Harry Krause
------------
If I save the whales, where do I keep them?
Del Cecchi wrote:
> Gould 0738 wrote:
> >
> > So the debate rages between X grade and Marine ply....
> >
> > Igor was probably right, nothing "requires" the use of marine ply for a sole in
> > a runabout since it isn't below the waterline (normally and hopefully).
> >
> > Marine ply is of course required in applications below the water line, because
> > when good old X grade delaminates (and it most certainly will) it could lead to
> > a sinking in short order.
> >
> > If used for a sole, the only likely consequence of good ol X grade delaminating
> > will be the need to repair the
> > sole yet again.
> >
> > If I had a buck for every engine housing, pilot seat, deck box, and so forth
> > built out of shed siding plywood and delaminating in small open boats, I could
> > take a couple of years off.
> >
> > A good clue: "What type of material has just failed in this application?"
> > Whatever is was, don't use it again.
> >
> > Is it better to buy marine ply once or X grade plywood over and over?
> > Hmmm......
> >
> > ________
> > Chuck Gould
> >
> > Float and let float.
>
> So, out of intellectual curiosity, what exactly is the difference?
>
> I have seen in this thread claims that the glue is the same and that it
> is different. Also that the wood is treated in some fashion, and that
> it is not. And it seems that there is a strength difference which would
> be of little matter when considering that flat surface upon which one
> stands while in a small boat.
>
> So if I buy a sheet of "green treated" plywood, would that do the job,
> remembering this is not the hull we are building.
>
> To net it out, glue: same or different?
> veneer: treated or plain?
>
> del cecchi
>In article <392B260E...@capu.net>, hkr...@capu.net wrote:
>>Gould 0738 wrote:
>>>
>>> So the debate rages between X grade and Marine ply....
>>>
>>> Igor was probably right, nothing "requires" the use of marine
>ply for a sole in
>>> a runabout since it isn't below the waterline (normally and
>hopefully).
>>>
>>> Marine ply is of course required in applications below the
>water line, because
>>> when good old X grade delaminates (and it most certainly
>will) it could lead to
>>> a sinking in short order.
>>>
>>> If used for a sole, the only likely consequence of good ol X
>grade delaminating
>>> will be the need to repair the
>>> sole yet again.
>>
>>
>>Ask Igor. That's what he did.
>>
>>
>>Harry Krause
>>------------
>>
>>If you shoot a mime, should you use a silencer?
>>Got to agree with Harry on this one. Marine plywood is the way
>to go. Do this; take a piece of CDX and a piece of marine ply
>and put both in a bucket of water. Come back the next day and
>have a look. If it is laminated in in fiberglass/epoxy, all the
>more reason to use marine grade. One little pin-hole, and, in
>that application, there will be, water gets in, has no place to
>evaporate out, and delaminates the plywood.
Then again, why trust this glue at all? When I replaced my deck, I
double-glassed the whole surface. Doesn't matter if it's Elmer's glue
holding the plys together, water is never going to touch it.
David
On Wed, 24 May 2000 08:55:44 -0400, hkr...@capu.net wrote:
>OnLanier wrote:
>>
>> In article <392B6BE7...@mediaone.net>, Jim Conlin
>> <con...@mediaone.net> wrote:
>> >I estimate that about 15% of the bandwidth in this NG is
>> consumed by the
>> >question "The floor of my BubbaCraft has gone mushy. How can
>> I fix it with PT
>> >plywood and bondo?"
>> >
>> >If PT and bondo are 'good enough', why does this question get
>> asked so often?
>> >
>> >For the next person who feels this question, I suggest that
>> researching a
>> >question through dejanews.com would be a fruitful first step.
>> Considerate, too.
Jerry Hahn wrote in message <#cKA#ccx$GA.272@cpmsnbbsa06>...
Now, David is a real boater. Truly. In the days I enjoyed lapstrake Lymans and
Cruisers, Inc.,, we always had a little salt water sloshing around beneath the
floorboards. In the winter, most of these boats were stored upside down, resting
on sturdy sawhorses. In the Spring, we sanded down the copper bottom paint and
put on a fresh coat, and gave the hullsides a fresh coat of white.
--
Harry Krause
------------
I.R.S.: We've got what it takes to take what you've got!
I would never use AC, let alone CDX for decking. The voids are
very annoying to walk on. After a while, they will feel like soft
spots. I guess if you glass the plywood very well, this might not
be as much a problem. But, personally, I would use the marine ply
and epoxy it.
Mike
--
===
Mike Porter <mi...@udel.edu>
PGP Fingerprint: F4 AE E1 9F 67 F7 DA EA 2F D2 37 F3 99 ED D1 C2
>
>
>Sure. I was out an entire day last weekend, albeit on a canoe. Out an entire day
>the week before and two days the week before that. I think I'll be out for a
>while tomorrow, and, of course, over the weekend if the weather is decent.
Which day and between which hours? I wanna look back through the
posts to see if someone was spoofing your sig because the posts are
nearly continuous 24/7. It's for your own protection, dontcha know.
>
Uh huh. I was out this morning for a couple of hours, too, doing a bit of
"testing."
Chew that.
--
Harry Krause
------------
Judge: An unemployed lawyer who wears a black dress.
> Even funnier...the floor or transom fails, so the "repair" is to rebuild
> with the same materials or methods as originally used. If I were patching a
> deck on which the ply had failed, I would have purchased a chunk of XL ply
> as the base material, a step up from plain old marine ply, glassed that on
> both sides and epoxied any necessary screw holes.
> The only "woodwork" I've done on our current little boat is an "attachment"
> board inside the center console on which I've mounted a battery charger and
> an additional electrical panel. It's a nice piece of white oak which I
> epoxied. I then drilled the four machine screw holes that hold it onto the
> inside of the console and the holes for the accessories. Then I painted the
> screw holes with epoxy. The oak doesn't get wet at all, but it is living in
> a wet environment.
You're such a helpful person, Harry. Have you ever considered joining
the Peace Corps? Many of your ideas and techniques would be a big hit
with the natives in the upper reaches of the Amazon, if you know what I
mean. I'm sure white oak, epoxy, and XL plywood are just what they need
for repairs to their dugouts.
--
Skipper
>
>The marine ply I have used is just a better piece(s) of wood.
>There are more plys, and there are no voids. The plywood is
>physically heavier. Perhaps glue weighs more than wood, or perhaps
>a denser wood is used in the first place.
------
having observed this thread for a while, I'm really chuckling. A gaggle of
folks making uneducated guesses about the qualities of marine vs exterior
plywood. Did anyone think of asking a plywood manufacturer to explain the
difference between the grades??
Joel Albert
Potomac, MD
((jral...@aol.com))
Uh...which grades, varieties and manufactures of marine ply would you like
compared?
--
Harry Krause
------------
If you don't care where you are, then you aren't lost.
>
> You're such a helpful person, Harry. Have you ever considered joining
> the Peace Corps? Many of your ideas and techniques would be a big hit
> with the natives in the upper reaches of the Amazon, if you know what I
> mean. I'm sure white oak, epoxy, and XL plywood are just what they need
> for repairs to their dugouts.
>
> --
> Skipper
Skipper,
Your comments are most helpful. I have a similar problem. Should I be
joining this Peace Core organization?
* Sent from RemarQ http://www.remarq.com The Internet's Discussion Network *
The fastest and easiest way to search and participate in Usenet - Free!
What's even funnier is the belief that the only differences between marine ply
and *not* marine ply are the glues and whether the veneers have voids.
There are qualities within the family of marine plys. Some veneers are better
than others for boat use. Not all the glues are the same. Some marine ply
manufacturers treat their products with special preservatives other
manufacturers do not use. Some manufacturers offer Lloyds-certified ply. Some
mills turn out higher quality product than others.
I don't believe marine ply is a parity product, like gasoline or soybeans.
--
Harry Krause
------------
Earn cash in your spare time -- blackmail your friends.
> Skipper wrote:
>> You're such a helpful person, Harry. Have you ever considered joining the
>> Peace Corps? Many of your ideas and techniques would be a big hit with the
>> natives in the upper reaches of the Amazon, if you know what I mean. I'm
>> sure white oak, epoxy, and XL plywood are just what they need for repairs
>> to their dugouts.
> Skipper,
> Your comments are most helpful. I have a similar problem. Should I be
> joining this Peace Core organization?
Oh, absolutely!
--
Skipper
> skipper has NO usefull boating comments, only personal insults that are a
> total waste of boating rec time. sorry for this wate of time.
But you make such an inviting target of opportunity, Perlstein.
--
Skipper
////
He's probably one of those guys that uses iron nuts and bolts on
his boat because the manufacturer told him stainless isn't any
stronger...