<<MMiller, need your help on deteriorated foam in hull, would this work: cut a inspection port hole, with a long piece of metal clean out deteriorated foam, vacuum, then use epoxy and fiberglass mat mixture and "stuff" it into the void areas using the piece of metal ? Pushing it back until it gets to good foam. Do this in all directions from the access hole. Making the area solid with epoxy & mat cloth. I have done a little fiberglass repair. I saw where someone else asking a similar question. I could angle boat in direction I was pushing mat so the epoxy would stay in place or use a gel epoxy. So what do you think,>>
That is an interesting idea that may work in a smaller area.
The "normal" suggested delamination repair does work very well.
This is under the FAQ topic of the forums:
http://www.hobiecat.com/community/viewtopic.php?t=1156
Hulls - Soft or Delaminated hulls on older boats
Soft hulls are caused by the foam and fiberglass layers becoming seperated or delaminated. This can be caused by heat, repeated compression (walking on) or other factors related to materials and age. This is normally correctable. A soft area is a structural breakdown and should be corrected before sailing the boat. Soft areas in decks near or ahead of the forward cross bar can cause complete failure of the bow and must be repaired before sailing the boat.
If your Hobie has soft or "delaminated" hulls or deck areas, take a look at the following link:
http://www.hobiecat.com/support/tech/delam.html
I did a search on Google to find information on the material that is excellent for this kind of repair "Git Rot" Flexible penetrating epoxy:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=Git+Rot