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Boat House
Non slip painted floor in a tin boat
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<blockquote data-quote="Johnny" data-source="post: 427651" data-attributes="member: 13599"><p><strong>"I could put a strip of aluminum under each seam </strong></p><p><strong>and screw it so the seams stay nice and even. </strong></p><p><strong>Then put some wood filler in each seam and sand smooth".</strong></p><p></p><p>if you approach it from the woodworkers standpoint, it would be</p><p>to pick an area where you can have the plywood seam uninterupted</p><p>on the back side. Scarf the joint and glue a 4" plywood backer under the joint.</p><p>Epoxy would never separate or fall out - wood filler would not be my 1st choice.</p><p>after it is all assembled, Bondo can be used to fill any imperfections prior to</p><p>priming and painting. A simple jig set up for your router would give you great results.</p><p>[ATTACH=full]89576[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>- or - if you have a biscuit joiner, a lot of biscuits in the joint will work too.</p><p></p><p></p><p>.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Johnny, post: 427651, member: 13599"] [b]"I could put a strip of aluminum under each seam and screw it so the seams stay nice and even. Then put some wood filler in each seam and sand smooth".[/b] if you approach it from the woodworkers standpoint, it would be to pick an area where you can have the plywood seam uninterupted on the back side. Scarf the joint and glue a 4" plywood backer under the joint. Epoxy would never separate or fall out - wood filler would not be my 1st choice. after it is all assembled, Bondo can be used to fill any imperfections prior to priming and painting. A simple jig set up for your router would give you great results. [ATTACH type="full" alt="scarf joint.gif"]89576._xfImport[/ATTACH] - or - if you have a biscuit joiner, a lot of biscuits in the joint will work too. . [/QUOTE]
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Non slip painted floor in a tin boat
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