Andy, thanks for your note. The transom rupture is more common on hulls with .100 gauge or less aluminum. However, even Snyder and Rockproof, who build their hulls out of .192 minimum, put a lip at the transom. You plan to go with heavy gauge aluminum on the pods is sound as they will in fact become a transom lip. I purchased a few gallons of 2-part foam and will be filling my pods with foam to ensure that even if they are ruptured, they will not take on water. I'm not paranoid, everyone really IS out to get me

:lol:
PS: the welder told me a frightening story of what can happen to even the toughest boat. He knew some guys who were driving a Snyder with .25 aluminum and .5' of UHMW on the hull. Bulletproof, in theory. They drove under an old railroad bridge and a section of track that was still attached to railroad ties was sticking up from the bottom at a 45-degree angle. It impaled the boat, stopped them dead and they both flew out of the boat. To this day, it blows my mind how much rougher river jet boating is compared to lake boating. On a lake, the biggest issues were a motor not starting, perhaps some dead trolling motor batteries, idiots on jet skis etc. Being impaled on a railroad track? Whoa.