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		the deck is all in and ready for glass. 
	I did away with the step down in the deck area, I felt it was treacherous for the kids. I re used the floor boxes,that was quite a bit of work to make them fit back in nicely and be create a strong mount.  | 
		
 sorry to tell you but i think the original work was far better 
	let me explain if one part was bad you can take out a square plus the parkay floor( i no i miss spelled that] could have been sanded and you can dance on it with a little polyurathane it would have looked great now its going to look like a boat before a dance floor it makes you think,,,,what were they thinking when they did that to such a great boat  | 
		
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 Looks great!  I hate the step down too, what were they thinking?  And Wellcraft isn't the only manufacturer who did them that way. 
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 thanks for all the kind words, 
	It sure does feel good to be walking on a deck again instead of crawling around in the bottom of the hull.  | 
		
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 I understand the theory of using multiple squares but thats only possible if you have an intact surface to lay them out on,my deck had already had the center section removed by a previous owner to allow a poor stringer fix,or if you pull the whole cap and turn it upside down. 
	I would also imagine you would need around 3-4 extra gallons of resin if you construct the deck in that manner. I sealed the underside of my sheeting with resin and 3/4 oz CSM.  | 
		
 Looking good. While the small square theory is sound, there is nothing wrong with whole sheets, especially in resto situations where there is no backing to lay the squares. As long add the under side is sealed with CSM you'll be good to go. 
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