
I'll spare you the saga of grinding out the existing chainplates and the issues with the chainplate fabrication (yes, I know there is an unused hole)... Even though she had been covered and on the hard for 12 months, the chainplate pockets were still full of muddy water when I ground them out. I had excellent plans provided by another Sea Spriter to install straight chainplates and feel pretty pleased with the results so far.
My question is how to handle the slots in the deck. The deck is not cored in this area and there are chainplate covers due to be reinstalled. To install the new chainplates, I had to file the openings slightly to install the new straight ones.
The slots were originally hand cut and a little random. They are about 1/16th of an inch wider now and 2 are 1/8" longer due to issues with placement of the new chainplates.
So... how do I seal up the slots before reinstalling the covers. They were sealed with polysulfide but they never were 100% water tight. We were never able to determine the exact location of the leaks however. This is a before photo with the gaps exposed once the vinyl rubrail was removed.
The vinyl rubrail and teak toe rail have been removed and all holes sealed with epoxy and then Captain Tolley's. As long as the chainplate slots are covered the deck is now dry. Even one drop of water down below will break me after all of this effort.
So... how to seal the slots? Just polysulfide? How would I epoxy the slots with the chainplates in place? My instructions end with "Just reinstall the chainplate covers and you're done." The boat didn't originally even have chainplate covers. We installed them in an attempt to stop the leaks. Any advice would be appreciated.
By the way, the Sea Sprite 23 is one of the sweetest sailing boats ever built.
Bly