by Wobbly Wheels » Wed Nov 28, 2012 11:51 pm
If you're using flat aluminum rather than corrugated, a polysulfide adhesive might be the best bet. It absorbs flex, especially the thermal flex of aluminum outdoors. It's what's used to hold hardware and wood decks on boats, so it'll probably withstand anything we can throw at it. Last winter, I did a refit on a 48' sailboat that included replacing the teak decks. I had two guys working for two weeks to strip the old wood off. They tried everything and found brute force was the only reliable method: a hammer beating on a thin blade (heavy putty knives).
That was specifically because it WAS able to flex and give: you couldn't pry it, you couldn't cut it, etc.
I don't know what the original builder used in 1988 and we used epoxy, but I'd certainly try using Sika LOT291. It comes in caulking tubes and I'd spread it with a notched trowel and weight it evenly: bricks on ply, vac, hydro, etc.
I think the trick would be to find an adhesive that would tolerate the difference in thermal expansion between foam and aluminum. Sika works on polycarbonate, which is FAR more problematic that way than aluminum.
JMHO though, haven't tried it.