copper penny's worth:
Years ago I bought 1/4" silicon bronze plate from Metal Service Center in Windsor CA.
707.838.8088, numbers may have changed. Recently a Triton owner got some bronze
from them...it ain't cheap.
I had it cut to width I thought I wanted: 1 3/4".
[I moved littlegull's plates to the outside of the hull, and made them twice as long.]
If you have your originals still installed, and want to keep them there, you'll notice it has
three bolts in the stubby plywood knees that hold the lowers. The top bolt goes through
nothing at the top of the bulkheads.
My pieces were rotten on top. Essentially the short bronze plate had one working fastener
for each plate. Not only that, but the rigging's tension on the plate is at an angle. Problem.
I think a much longer plate is needed to add a real third bolt at least 2" down from the top
of the plywood.
Since original chainplate knees are only tabbed to the hull, I sistered in another piece,
doubling the thickness. Created more substantial tabbing to the hull, and some over head
in the V-berth.
You may have some balsa core deterioration in the deck. Depending on the extent, it might
be corrected by digging it out and replacing with epoxy and chopped strand or......?
A third decent fastening will also more likely immobilize the chainplate and keep it from ever
moving in its thrudeck position, making it easier to caulk.
Whether you choose butyl or 5200 is a personal choice. Permanent 5200 will eventually
oxidize and shrink and become cracked. (Then what do you do?) While butyl may become
problematic, it's quite possible that the CompassMarine Bed-It butyl will outlast the life of
your boat, it is outrageously tenacious, won't harden, won't degrade in sunlight.
Also believe that the cover plates around thrudeck chainplates often seen on older boats
is good insurance against leakage through the deck at the chainplates. These 'beautyplates'
have their own screws. Maintenance can be done by recaulking these covers when needed.
Aluminum bronze is very strong stuff. Have no experience with it.
My silicon bronze plate, which has grain since it is not cast, is also pretty strong stuff.
Found it relatively easy to jig saw, shape, drill holes, round edges, smooth and shine with
normal blades & files, and papers. Tapered, rounded, edged on a combo table sander.
Al oxide disk and belt.
www.tnfasteners.com/ to find bronze bolts and fasteners, Including tre`cool strut bolts!
Also known as Top Notch Fasteners. They have the best selection anywhere.
MaineSail CompassMarine has an encyclopedic photo essay on installing metal fittings on
our fiberglass boats. Worth a looksee.
Have fun!:D