Sorry, I didn't mean the suggested added bolt - I was referring to a previous recommendation:
"The other thing is to make sure the inboard bolts stay tight. I recommend keeping a T-handle allen wrench in your tool box (I believe it’s a 1/4” hex) and tighten them periodically."
I'm wondering if this screws into metal threads and can be tightened forever, if you use the right anti-seize, or if it screws into fiberglass. Great spot for semi-permanent loctite if it's metal to metal so it won't loosen, but can still be removed. Maybe loctite works on metal to fiberglass too? I've never tried that.
Not having disassembled anything, the pictures were a revelation. I now understand this other earlier comment too:
"The two main things would be to ensure that the crossbar end castings are firmly attached to the hulls. Keep the screws tight. If they keep loosening up, you’ll need to either fill in the holes for the little pegs with thickened epoxy and/or just bond the entire casting to the hull with epoxy."
This is an old boat that I'm just sailing for fun, so the solution doesn't have to be perfect and last forever and the end castings don't really have to be removable. "Perfect is the enemy of good" and all that. I'm wondering though if using something like these in stainless might make some of the attachments to fiberglass more durable with a metal to metal thread:

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