Thanks for the reply. I suppose i'm looking for moral support
Yes, I have considered coming up with some way to create vaccuum to suck the epox in as well as using pressure of some sort to push epox in. I have a vaccumn box that is used from an air compressor to evac auto a/c units and was wondering if I could make that work. Not sure how i might pressurize to put the epoxy in. Need something that would despence at least 12 ounces or more at a time. I was thinking of a caulk gun with a bunch of empty caulk cartridges. I do know one thing, I do NOT want to drill hole every 2-3 inches along entire length of hull.
Here are the epoxy applications i've been thinking of.
1. CHANNELING METHOD: With hulls removed from frame and turned upside down on saw horses,
drill holes just above the solid glass area of the keel and just below the deck(in reference to keels being right side up) maybe 3 inches apart for maybe a foot, starting at one end of the hull. Use a wire or cable made of spring type steel so it can flex but not bend, and run it through the hole to the top of the hull close to the deck. These would be channels, 3 inches used to run the epox into.
2. SURGICAL METHOD: Cut slit, maybe 1 or 2 feet long just above the solid glass area of the keel. Use small spacers to hold the slit open like an evelope. Use thin piece of spring type steel to fully seperate foam from outside layer of glass. Poor epoxy down into this area and then remove the spacers.
I'm leaning towards method 1.
I'll be ordering a 2 gallon penatrating epoxy kit from local distributer in next few days. WIth shipping, should cost around $100. I wonder how far that will get me.