
My options, as I see them, are to:
- Bite the bullet and order the sheet of aluminum, paying a huge price AND waiting another three weeks or so for delivery.
- Use two smaller pieces to cover the galley hatch with a flat butt seam between them, presumably covered with some sort of trim. Does anyone have any advice to offer about that? I'm inclined to think it's a poor solution, but have no experience with this sort of thing so I'm VERY open to suggestions.
- Look for another source of aluminum, probably in Sacramento as some have already suggested in another thread. IF I can find a source, however, I'll still need to rent a large enough truck or a flatbed trailer to pick it up, and it's a six hour drive each way, so the cost of trailer rental and a couple tanks of gas get added to the cost of the aluminum, and I spend a long day driving. All in all, not much of a savings, and that's IF I can find a source.
- Skin the galley hatch with something different. The trailer sides are already skinned with 0.040 mill finish aluminum and I'm ready to skin the top of the trailer tomorrow. I've considered making the galley hatch a woody, fiberglassed for protection. Can anyone offer any advice about that? Can I glass just the outside plywood covering, which is 1/4 inch ply? Should I wrap the glass around the edge, or end it flush with the edge of the sheet? I have even less experience working with fiberglass than I have with aluminum, so I suppose I need to read up on it. And get the materials.
How UV stable is the epoxy? Does it need some sort of topcoat for longevity? Does it need periodic reapplication, and if so, are there issues with the caulk used to seal up the aluminum roof edge trim and other alum. angle molding? Boats are made with the stuff, so it must be pretty robust.
Would some other clear coat solution work better? Four or five coats of spar varnish, like Epifanes? Something else?
Any suggestions other than wood and 'glass?
Damn.

--Mike C.