[quote="jdoorly"]I promised you pics of the companionway hatch so here's that...

][/quote
I moved this quote from the discussion on jdoorly’s rudder lever-jack to here because I didn’t want to drive that discussion thread off topic.
Ever since I first saw jdoorly’s companionway hatch modification to Desperado, I’ve been intrigued by it, and had been thinking of something similar for my boat. Now, having spent a lot of time in the past few weeks crawling in and out of the cuddy, and more than several times banging my head on the cuddy lip and ceiling, it reinforces my desire to do something with it this winter.
So does anyone have an opinion on the viability of cutting a way a section of the cuddy roof/deck (trying to make it sound nautical) and adding reinforcing edges to both the cuddy roof/deck and the cutout piece in order to re-use the cut out as the main hatch component?
The constructed edges would need to be watertight, but I don’t see any reason they could not be raised similar to what jdoorly did with his.
This is a picture showing the general concept of what I’m aiming toward.

It really is very close to what jdoorly did, but a little clearer shot of the edge components. Obviously this is not a DaySailer, and the lines of the frame would be different, and jdoorly has essentially proven it will work, but but can anyone come up with a reason that my idea of reusing the fiberglass cut out panel is a non-starter?
For jdoorly specifically, while cutting and documenting my porthole project, I took a number of inside the cuddy shots, and an athwartships roof/deck support can be seen in this photo.

Did you have to pay any special attention to that when fabricating your companionway hatch? Does it draw strength from its entire span (as an arch) or is it just a fiberglass support, and by screwing it into the companionway assembly, it should still be able to support nominal weight on the deck in that area (since I likely would avoid standing on the hatch)?
Thanks for any thoughts you all may have.
DS #6127 - Breakin' Wind - From the land of 10,000 lakes, which spend 80% of the year frozen it seems...