QuoteI would presume that you would glass everything to every stringer, hull side, anything to get more support. AND multiple layers, each being scruffed/ground and the next being longer than the previous. Multiple layers, each being scruffed/ground is not the way to do it.Work cleanly, have all your glass precut and sized and start laying. While the previous layer is still green lay the next one and so on.
I would presume that you would glass everything to every stringer, hull side, anything to get more support. AND multiple layers, each being scruffed/ground and the next being longer than the previous.
The cut-outs are solely for the cleats and allow a solid anchor point directly to the transom. The location also keeps them of the way. In the starbord side cut-out, below the cleat, is the receiver for the sternlight post.
As far as mine truthfully being a '72, that is simply an article of faith. It's what the previous registration said. My gut tells me they were guessing. The builder's hull number (port side just below the kicker tiller) is not in current HIN format. Current format started Nov. '72 I think so I'm sometime before that. I haven't heard that Steved, Official Historian, has a list that correlates the old hull serial numbers to dates.
Do you still have the builder's plate number for your boat & a known build year? If the serial numbers were assigned sequentially, maybe we can figure out where my boat fits into the picture.
Rick, Dumb question: If there's no number on your hull how can the hull be tied to your registration certificate? On my boat somone in the past had stamped the assigned registration on the stbd. top of the transom.