Andy Brown
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2003
- Messages
- 2,657
Thomas,Andy, you described the brass tube as held in by large dowels. I assume they have a near same od to the aluminum rods. How are the dowels built into the sponson? I need the picture painted in my head before I rationalize a restoration attempt, or I heed the safe play advice. Thanks!
A 1" O.D. wood dowel with a 17/32" hole bored into it for the brass tube is glued into the foam core. It is sandwiched between the inside sponson plate and an internal (not visible) sponson plate that is similar to the inner plate.
So there are a total of 3 sponson plates or formers . The inner, the internal, and the outside chine plate. The top of the round 1" dowel is sanded flat before the sponson is decked. Therefore the dowel is also secured to the deck. The 1" dowel is as long as the bottom of the sponson is wide. The brass tube, which has a plug in the end to keep glue from entering into it is glued into the sponson after the sponson constructing is complete with 5 min epoxy. The brass tube passes through a 17/32" hole in the internal plate. Everything is assembled with 5 min epoxy.
It is a strong structure. Have never seen one total destroyed beyond repair, even after crashing into concrete wall.