Replacing a boat floor

huntin24/7

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Eastern Montana
The floor on my 20 year old Lund was rotten so I tore it out. I was looking to replace with marine grade plywood but no one anywhere near me has it or will order it. Anyone have any other ideas as far as similar quality plywood that would work or know of reputable places to order marine grade from? Coosa board is too $$$ or I’d go that route.
 
The floor on my 20 year old Lund was rotten so I tore it out. I was looking to replace with marine grade plywood but no one anywhere near me has it or will order it. Anyone have any other ideas as far as similar quality plywood that would work or know of reputable places to order marine grade from? Coosa board is too $$$ or I’d go that route.
Have you checked with your local marina boat shops? They routinely replace floors.
 
Have you checked with your local marina boat shops? They routinely replace floors.
I checked with the only one within 3 hours of us and they order it from the lumber store they ever need it. Of course, none of them will special order the smaller amount I need. Lol.
 
I have no idea if this works for a boat, but there are several brands that make a "marine grade" plywood sealer.

We have a permanent goose pit in a corn field with a plywood lid. We have powerwashed it after harvest and then rolled on a marine grade sealant a few times. The lid obviously is out in the elements 365 days a year and also gets center pivot irrigated. It hasn't rotted out and we only apply a new coat every other year.
I know with a boat, you're not going to want to re-seal very often, but depending on product life and how much its exposed to water, it might work well.
 
Ran into the same issue when replacing the plywood transom sandwiched between aluminum in back of my old Lund.
I just replaced it with a double layer of treated plywood, screwed and glued everything real good, coated it all sides and edges with good paint and then caulked everything really good.
So far, so good. It's been about ten years.
 
Ran into the same issue when replacing the plywood transom sandwiched between aluminum in back of my old Lund.
I just replaced it with a double layer of treated plywood, screwed and glued everything real good, coated it all sides and edges with good paint and then caulked everything really good.
So far, so good. It's been about ten years.
I m getting ready to do that on my Crestliner. Debating between a poured epoxy, coosa board, or just going with the plywood that will last long enough.
 
When I restored my 1979 starcraft, I used 3/4" regular ply. Sealed it in 3 coats of epoxy, over drilled all holes and filled with epoxy, then drilled again so no wood is ever exposed. It's a 20+ year floor but heavy. Marine ply is not needed.

Another option is a pure aluminum floor. I wish tiny boat nation (TBN)was around before I did my rebuild. Using angled AL as support, that allows a thinner AL sheet for a solid floor foundation. Lightweight and will last a lifetime, the boat becomes an heirloom you can pass down. A bit more expensive and time consuming but no worries after that. Compatible with any flooring you have in mind - vinyl, hydroturf, carpet. My wood floor is covered in hydroturf and I love it. TBN also has some cool hydroturf mods where they carve custom designs into it with a router. Next time I rebuild a boat...
 

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