I would up going with 16 gauge galvanized. The guy at the shop said he was concerned with the punched holes wearing over time on the aluminum. Plus, the galvanized was cheaper. Total cost was $375 for a dozen shiny new pieces of metal. Took 4 days. Got $15.00 for the old pieces at the scrap yard
I gave him one crossmember as a sample, and numbered the holes. The nasty OEM pieces were all the same with 14 mounting holes on one surface, 5 holes on the top surface (for the elevator bolts), and two 1" grommet holes on the vertical surface to pass wires bow to stern.
Although it sounds like alot, all pieces got the 5 holes on top. Easy. For the bottom, 6 were the same (4 holes), 2 had 2 holes (first 2 up front). 2 pairs of two forming the high hat with the z channel had 10 holes or so for mounting the transom, etc. Instead of drilling, the shop punched all the oval holes, so I have some wiggle room to do adjustments. I thought that wa spretty cool.
I think I have the bolts and washers picked out, it's the NUTS I have a question on! I am using 3/8" stanless steel hex head bolts to attach the crossmembers to the pontoon brackets. I see many people using nuts with the nylon inserts. I think that's fine for rail mounting, etc. But for the crossmembers and transom I was going to use reverable locking nuts, like these -
http://www.boltdepot.com/Two-way_revers ... _18-8.aspx
As a matter of fact, I was thinking about using the locking nuts everywhere instead of the nylon inserts (elevator bolts, transom wood, railing, etc.). Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Just looking for a little direction. Is one better that the other?