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Compass Marine How To | all galleries >> Welcome To MarineHowTo.com >> Replacing Thru-Hulls and Seacocks > Cut Your Backing Plates
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20-NOV-2007

Cut Your Backing Plates

After the fiberglass board has cured you can then proceed to drill your backing plates. This is easier said than done! You will need at least a 5.5 to 6.5 inch hole saw and a very large and powerful drill.


The friction of the six inch hole saw, on the fiberglass hole, is tremendous and can and will kill a wimpy drill. I use my drill press for this but a large and powerful 1/2 inch drill from the likes of Milwaukee, Porter Cable or DeWalt is a must. Home Depot will rent you large drills and I advise this if you don't have a drill that is up to the task.
Trust me you will kill a Black and Decker or Ryobi before you even make it half way through your first hole!


One word of advice on drilling these backing plates is "CLAMPS". By this I mean always clamp your work down before you begin drilling or you'll have a giant spinning fiberglass saw on your hands.


Circular fiberglass backing plates are certainly the best looking but tough on the hole saws and too much for cheap drill motors. Another practical alternative is to cut a hexagon or octagon with a miter saw or table saw. This method will be faster and easier but just not as neat.

Nikon D70s
1/60s f/4.0 at 31.0mm hide exif
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Date/Time20-Nov-2007 09:59:54
MakeNikon
ModelNIKON D70s
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length31 mm
Exposure Time1/60 sec
Aperturef/4
ISO Equivalent
Exposure Bias
White Balance
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Programprogram (2)
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Guest 19-Dec-2017 17:21
Makes sense. What if you also put a cylinder of something (PVC pipe, cardboard tube, etc.) in the center of the bucket that is the same O.D. as the through hull? Then you would have no hole saw cutting and just flange hole drilling?
Brianna 16-Feb-2015 21:13
Here is an easier way:
Mix up chop strand and powder with resin and hardener just as you would for building up a fillet (peanut butter).

Do this in a disposable plastic container the diameter you need, to a depth of about 3/8". When it cures just pop it out of the plastic container and voila, a perfect backing plate puck.