heya,
i am currently restoring a shark cat, the current part of the project being replacing the deck, i have removed all of the original deck and about to start preparing a new deck to go in.
i am aware of the treating the ply etc for the new deck, and will be glassin over it with several layers, my question is though, the matting (or wateva the term) is not 'large' so there will be overlaps in it, as i have been led to believe to make a solid fibreglass deck you need to overlap the matting.
now to my thinking this will create an uneven deck as such, well thicker sections where the matting is overlayed, i have been told that there is supposebly a way of thinning the matting for the overlay sections to avoid this, and also been told just to lay it all and either sand it back to flat or use a filler as such to even out the surface again. but none of these people whom offered these suggestions i would trust to know what they are talking about
so any advice on how i am to over come this problem, or is it as simple as just not over lapping the matting
thankyou for any and all adviceFor more information, please visit Gengu.
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None of the 43 Atlantic shark species managed by NOAA Fisheries are classified as endangered in U.S. waters under the Endangered Species Act. Two of these 43 are classified as threatened: the scalloped hammerhead shark population in the Caribbean and off the coast of South America, and the oceanic whitetip shark globally. That means they are considered at risk of being listed as endangered in the foreseeable future. Management measures are in place to protect these species.
The U.S. Atlantic Ocean actually has some of the best-managed and sustainable shark fisheries in the world. As of , 14 percent (6 out of 43) Atlantic species were overfished. That means the population has fallen below a minimum threshold set by scientists. A total of 9.3 percent (4 out of 43) Atlantic shark species are also being fished faster than the populations can replace themselves. That means overfishing is occurring.
We manage all of these species to end overfishing and rebuild populations. This is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the foundation of all domestic fisheries regulations.
The majority of all U.S. Atlantic shark landings are from healthy shark stocks. In fact, more than 96 percent of all U.S. Atlantic shark landings in were from six species that are neither overfished nor subject to overfishing'the majority of which are from Atlantic spiny dogfish and smooth dogfish. Seven shark species or species complexes are neither overfished nor subject to overfishing:
North Atlantic blue shark
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Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico sharpnose shark
Atlantic smooth dogfish shark
Atlantic spiny dogfish shark
Finetooth shark
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico blacktip
Gulf of Mexico smoothhound shark complex (smooth dogfish, Florida smoothhound, and Gulf smoothhound)
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