Should I re use the existing tank or replace it since it is 25 yrs old...I am not going to have the tank access panel , only access for sending unit and hose connections.Appriciate your input..Thanks !
I was thinking about going with a thicker single 1 1/2'' for the stringer, but I was told it would be much stronger to go double up on the 3/4'' and glass in between ....that most of the strengh was in the lamination and the out layers of the coosa...many opinions..it would be much easier ansd cheaper to go with 1 1 1/2'' or 2'' stringer...the cost from between 3/4'' and 2 '' is only about $50.00 per sheet...
I built my stringers out of 20# density 3/4 inch coosa and doubled it up with 1708 in between. With the stringers being roughly 18ft long I reversed the cuts so they came out as one solid stringer. After shaping and fitting the stringers I then biaxled the whole stringer, set and fit it in cabesoled then triple tabbed it with more 1708. It was way over kill but that is what I wanted as my boat will see 10's of thousands of hours of use. For the bulk heads I used 3/4 coosa. Once wrapped and then triple tabbed in the grid stringer system seems like the strongest way to go and is the closest to what they build on high end production boats. ie Schaffer. Everything locks together. I chose not to put any foam back in the boat, after removing all that wet foam I could just not bring myself to do it.By the time the stringers where all glassed in they are about 2 inches wide. I used 5200 to stick the floor down to the stringers and did not use a single screw, I made the deck with about a 1 inch crown in the middle so the water runs off to the sides.The 11/2inch 26# bluewater coosa I used for the transom is crazy strong with 2 layers of roven fiberglass though it. The sheet for the transom was expensive compared to the sheets of 20# 3/4. It seems with the coosa 26 a piece of 11/2inch is more than twice as much as a sheet of 3/4 26.If I remember right for the stringers, bulkheads deck and casting platform I used 8 sheets of the 3/4 and this left me enough scrap to build the short fuel tank stringers,hatches, under the bow cap and gussets too. I think for the total build I bought 10 sheets of 3/4, 1 sheet of 11/2 and 1 sheet of 1/2 inch to do the transom cap and transom cabinet. I also built my console out of 3/4 coosa which was kind of a waste but I had the material so I used it.For fiberglass supplies I used a full roll of 1708, pretty much a full roll of 11/2oz mat, 60gals of resin and 1/2 a bag of cabasol. I re-glassed the whole inside of the hull with 1708 after having it sandblasted before I started to build and made fiberglass panels for the gunnels which used quite a bit of material.I had never worked with coosa and found it to easier to cut and shape than wood and you can use all the same tools you would use with wood. For what you save in weight using the coosa you can way over build and still end up with a lighter and stronger end product than using wood and best of all you never have to worry about rot if something is not quite perfectly sealed.Capt Matt