That sounds reasonable. Just hard to say whether any individual spot is water 
or simply a void. Not trying to be difficult; I simply think we should be 
cautious about measurements of the unseen. 

Rich Knowles
Indigo. LF38
Halifax

On 2013-04-09, at 11:18, Joel Aronson <joel.aron...@gmail.com> wrote:

Rich,
The jump in reading indicated it was an area of concern.  He tapped the entire 
boat.  If the tapping and the meter correlated, he felt it was an issue.  
Fortunately, they were few and small.  In the case of a high reading at the 
babystay, the issue was caused by a missing bolt.

Joel
35/3
The Office
Annapolis


On Tue, Apr 9, 2013 at 10:12 AM, Knowles Rich <r...@sailpower.ca> wrote:
> To my point. Did the jump mean excessive/any water under the surface or 
> simply an irregularity in the thickness or nature of the fiberglass or the 
> presence of plywood etc. beneath the surface???
> 
> I guess what I'm trying to note is that I believe there is plenty of 
> opportunity to make erroneous judgements of what is going on under the 
> fibreglass sukin. I know that there are a couple of "hollow" sounding spots 
> on my boat's deck which have been there for the 16 years I have owned her 
> with no evident cause for alarm.
> 
> Rich Knowles
> Indigo. LF38
> Halifax
> 
> On 2013-04-09, at 10:45, Joel Aronson <joel.aron...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> > My surveyor used a Skipper moisture meter.  It had an analog gauge.  If it 
> > jumped, it indicated a potential problem.
> >
> > Joel
> > 35/3
> > The Office
> > Annapolis
> 
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Joel 
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