A long-winded report this time...
I was gone for several days after the bed liner painting. That stuff is incredibly rude but luckily my brain's at a point in its life-span that loosing a few more cells didn't seem to have any major affect - at least none that showed (yet!). After five days of curing I took off the boat cover and there was practically no odor left. That made me feel better about having used it. So it was back to finish the floor framing and begin to add floatation.
I had to place some of the foam before I screwed the floor framing down. Once that was done I filled in the areas beneath and between the framing members gluing it all with PL300 foam glue.
I should back up a moment to say that as part of finishing the framing I added two conduits to the framing in order to make electrical runs from the front to the back of the boat. I used 1" PVC pipe tied to the long sides of the ladder with zip ties. At the front I drilled a hole into each web of the ladder and cut the PVC at 45° to create a passageway into the pipes as seen below.
You can see the hole near the bracket at the inside front left of the ladder.
And out the back. There won't be a floor in the back 30" to accommodate two gas cans and a battery.
Next was a cardboard template for the floor.
The floor needs to be about 56" wide at its widest point. Rather than take the time to hunt down a piece of 5'x9' plywood, and in order to use exterior glued material, I used a 4'x8' piece of ACX to which I had to add 8" to the width. In order to take advantage of the strength of the plywood in combination with the framing I decided to add the 8" strip in the center of the plywood. This seems counter-intuitive and kind of crazy but the way the framing worked out there is more strength at the middle than at the edges. I was worried that adding a strip to the edge of the sheet would create a weak area along the joints on both sides. Adding the strip in the center places the weakest areas (the joints) along the strongest part of the framing and the area where I can put the most fasteners. So, crazy or not here's what I did.
This may be TMI for this thread but there may be some out there who would be interested in how edge joining is done. I must say at the start that if this was good hardwood I would have had to take better care in how I handled and clamped the boards. In this case because it's plywood and will be covered with carpet I was only interested in making a good glue joint and not in being meticulous about how it was done.
There are several ways to make edge joints. Using a biscuit joiner is popular these days, and there is the more traditional dowel which is what I used. There is also a spline joint which essentially creates a two-sided tongue-and-groove joint but with plywood it is really not ideal (fine when manufactured that way, not so easy once the plywood becomes warped after the fact).
I used dowels because I think they're more accurate, at least for me they seem to work better. The biscuit joiner requires the operator to always be paying attention that the tool is flat and firmly on top of the material being joined - otherwise a sloppy joint will occur. The dowel process uses a self-centering jig that insures the hole is always in the center of the edge of the boards being joined.
The jig has several holes for different sized drill bits. I used 3/8" bit and dowels. You can see on the side of the jig the numbers stamped into the jig indicating the drill size. What you cant see in the scribe mark indicating the center of the hole.
To begin I clamped the two edges together that I was joining. It's important to take this step when marking out the holes. I used a square and drew a line across the joint on 16" centers and 2" in from each edge. This gave me accurate lines for each half of the joint to align the dowel jig to. Do this carefully and accurately and the thing goes together easily. Do a sloppy job and you won't be able to bring the two sides together no matter how much cursing you do. It's important.
So you set the jig with the scribe mark aligned to the pencil mark for each hole, tighten and drill.
And as they say, "viola", a perfectly centered hole.
I should note that you shouldn't drill the holes too deep or you'll drive the dowel too far into one side of the joint. Drill them too shallow and you won't be able to bring the joint together. Take your time, do it carefully. The dowels I used were 2" deep so I drilled each hole about 1-1/8" deep. You can make your own dowels from stock dowels but I prefer the pre-made fluted ones. The fluted ones allow the glue and air to escape as you drive the dowel into the hole making for a better more solid seating of the dowel.
Once the holes were drilled I squeezed some waterproof glue into the holes of the narrow side and seated the dowels, wiping off any glue that worked its way to the surface.
Once all the dowels are seated in one side of the joint, you squeeze glue into the opposite set of holes and glue one edge of the plywood. I glued the narrower half that I had already installed the dowels into. Once you've glued the edge (on a real project you'd glue both edges) it's time to put the two together. I aligned the dowels with the holes and with the aid of four pipe clamps slowly brought the two halves together, working from end to end about 1/4" at a time. Once The two halves were together I repositioned the clamps and really tightened them.
There is a tendency for the pressure of the clamps to cup the joint in the direction of the clamp - in this case up. In a real shop you'd have enough clamps to use an equal number on eace face of the joint making the pressure equal and keeping the joint flat. In my garage/outdoor "shop" I improvise a lot. I used a 2x4 along the length of the joint and clamped it to the plywood. This put pressure against the downward force of the clamps and straightened out the joint at each end. For the middle I clamped boards cross-wise and that flattened the joint. Even though it should be obvious, the edges of the boards need to be at 90° to the surface or you'll never make a flat joint. Even a degree counts as a degree on each side makes a total of two degrees off.
Ok that's it. Sorry for the long post. Tomorrow the other half of the joint and then cutting out the floor.