Chuck Gould
Senior Member
We owned our previous boat for 17 years, and it was moored outside most of the time.
During that period, we had to sand down and revarnish the teak quarterboards three times. After replacing the lettering on the boards the first two times, I finally wised up. A local plastic shop cut two pieces of clear plexiglass exactly the size and shape of the quarterboards. The new lettering was applied to the plexiglass, and the plexiglass then screwed to the boards.
It was almost impossible to see the plexiglass between the teak and the lettering. We sold the boat before the boards needed to be refinished again, but had we kept it we would have been able to "save" the lettering while sanding down the teak. The cost of the plexiglass was about the same as the cost of replacing the lettering.
During that period, we had to sand down and revarnish the teak quarterboards three times. After replacing the lettering on the boards the first two times, I finally wised up. A local plastic shop cut two pieces of clear plexiglass exactly the size and shape of the quarterboards. The new lettering was applied to the plexiglass, and the plexiglass then screwed to the boards.
It was almost impossible to see the plexiglass between the teak and the lettering. We sold the boat before the boards needed to be refinished again, but had we kept it we would have been able to "save" the lettering while sanding down the teak. The cost of the plexiglass was about the same as the cost of replacing the lettering.