Has anyone tried this product for the boat sides/bottom?
http://www.patriottimber.com/sureply.htm
I got some the other day for the rear panel of some cabinets I was making. Looking at it closely, it seems pretty nice. Their website says "waterproof glue, but not manufactured to marine standards..."
Seems like if it were coated with epoxy or glassed it should fine. It's got a nice look to it, other than the nailing grid marked onto one side.
Don Hanson
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Take a few scraps and soak them in a jar for a few weeks/months. Put another piece in the dishwasher for a while...
Let us know how it goes... always looking for alternative affordable materials.
That's a good idea. Dishwasher. I can tuck a little square away somewhere in there and if it holds for a week or two, the glue should be good enough, at least for an encapsulated build.
I was hoping someone had built with this material already ...
OK,
Forget the Sure Ply. It didn't take long to discover that it swells unevenly when immersed. I stuck a sample into my grinder wheel cooling dip, zip tied to a second piece of Hydrotek meranti ply as a control. In just one day, the Sureply got a bump in it, a swelling. On closer examination, it looks like they manufactured it by simply overlapping the inner cores and then compressing it as they glued or something. Anyhow, where the inner cores overlap, it swelled up, the cores went back to their normal thickness, making that overlap turn into a bump. You can see it with your eye. I measured the bump to be about .03"... The general thickness seems to be about .222" and where the cores overlap has swelled to .256" I just did a small 2"x2" scrap but it looks like the overlap core joint runs lengthwise down the sheet of Sureply.
I'll let it soak some more...but one day! Glad I didn't build a fancy smancy showboat out of that and have it go all wonky from rain or humidity.
Good call, Brad.
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