Hi Scott, repair the blisters. There is a lot online about the process and I think west marine has info on their site. If you have some you probably have others that are not so obvious. You can go over light scratches with the barrier coat without repairing. This depends on how smooth you want the result so I would say it is up to you. I am not sure about he green below the gel coat. That is some forensics on the boat history that can be hard to figure out. You can clean the hull below the water line but I would not worry about removing wax or mold release at that age unless you know someone waxed the bottom of the boat. I believe the barrier coat has you sand the hull lightly to prep it. This would help you find other blisters. Clean with solvent or alcohol then barrier coat the number of coats recommended (six I think) then bottom paint. Good luck! Robbin On 5/8/2013 6:04 PM, Scott Larson wrote:
I am in the process of getting my newly acquired Montgomery 15 ready for bottom paint. Since it will be sitting at a mooring, I think it will be prudent to prep it with an epoxy barrier paint and then paint with my bottom paint of choice. I have found a product that seems to get the hull nice and clean. It is this highly caustic stuff, but tends to get all the grub and stains off the hull. I will be using a new product by West Marine (made by Petit). They claim you should prepare the hull using this stuff that costs over 30.00 a quart to remove residual mold release agent. I suppose it is possible that there may still be some mold release agent on a 30 YO hull. But even if there is, I have read that it can be removed with warm water and a sponge. Does anyone have any feedback on this matter?
As for painting the bottom with barrier coat, is there any reason why I cannot just paint over the small scratches with the barrier coat without filling them? Also, there are some areas with small blisters, about 1-2 mm. What should I do with those?
Also, a few of the scratches seem to reveal green gelcoat beneath the white gelcoat. Is it possible that the boat was originally given a coat of green gelcoat beneath the white gelcoat? This might actually make sense if the entire mold were sprayed with white up to the sheerstrake first, then had the entire inside of the mold sprayed up to the sheerline with green gelcoat to get the green stripe. The other possibility is that the hull was originally green and it was painted or given a new gelcoat up to the sheerstrake. If that were the case, whoever did it, did a pretty good job of it.
As for the centerboard, the pin is covered with what appears to be a silicone marine sealant on each side. Should I just leave that alone and hope for the best? Does the centerboard have a hook at the end where it attaches to the pin? In that case held in by the force of gravity? From the pictures of John Harris' repair, it appears that he re-set the pin before putting the board back in.
Any insight would be great!
Scott Larson