Maybe you had bad 5200 Tod. 5200 has been used for years to bond lots of stuff to lots of stuff. I do have a couple of suggestions to make the bond better.
1. Scuff the surface like has been mentioned here.
2. Mist both surfaces to be bonded with water. The 5200 is a moisture cured urethane product and water makes it cure faster.
3. Don't encapsulate the bond. Many times product has been used to build transoms and then the whole transom is covered in fiberglass. Onoce covered, no wate can get in and with no moisture, there is no cure.
Hope this helps.
Mark W
From my utility construction days with sewer and water pipe, I had considered using pieces of SDR-35 that come in 13' lengths. It won't just shatter because it's cold out, but I don't think it will hold up to the use/abuse a duck boat goes through. I think it would look kinda... well cheap, for lack of a better term.
On a quick internet search, I did find a place that sells stips of bronze and stainless (only 1' sections) and it looks like it's somewhere around 5'/ft. Maybe I can scrounge something up at the scrap yard around here. I'm debating just leaving well enough alone, and running this thing for a season without any guards as I have no idea what the previous owners did to wear through the glass down to the wood keelson.
Tod, Did you "wet out" both surfaces with 5200 when you set the keel guards in place?
The reason I ask is I have seen some horrific deformation of wood when the aluminum has corroded and compressed the wood under it as the fasteners held it down. I'm talking about soft woods mainly. One instance in particular was on an old Motor Life Boat that had aluminum hand rails installed. Where the uprights were bolted the compression on the canvas, white cedar whaleback was 2/3 the thickness of the cedar. (Two-3/8" lamination's.)
I started wetting out both surfaces in an attempt to remedy this but the jury is still out until enough time passes. That is why any and all observations on the subject are appreciated.
To be sure the problem lies less with the 5200 than with the aluminum and its "Creeping crevice corrosion" or whatever it is called.
Thanks,
Eric