Bill, Those dark smoky areas could be bad news. Sounds like osmosis blistering, where water gets through the gel coat and starts dissolving the chemicals in the layers behind it. (I assume you're talking about below the water line.) There's others on the list who have dealt with that or you can get a technical bulletin from Interlux (#900D) that describes the causes and how to fix it. Good luck, Larry On Thu, 6 Nov 2003 16:48:00 -0800 Bill Sylvester <wmcsyl1@cox.net> writes:
Larry,
Thanks for the suggestions. Tullamore does look beautiful. I have found that there are a lot of dark (smoky looking) areas on the hull. I am hoping that a fiberglass cleaner will help wash them out.
Bill
On Thursday, November 6, 2003, at 04:23 PM, Larry Yake wrote:
Bill, I did the same project on Tullamore a couple years ago. I used Peel Away Bottom Paint Stripper. It's safe on fiberglass and gel coat and is available from West Marine (page 338 in the 2003 catalog). It's a
messy, slow, tedious job getting that old paint off though. The stuff smears on like finger paint, you leave it there for a hour or two I believe, covered with wax paper, and it softens the old paint so you can wipe, scrape, rub, etc., etc., and eventually get the slimy paste off. It won't be a pretty finish when you're done though. The old gel coat will be stained and lines of the old paint will be visible in any old scratches that they painted over. I had to repaint the hull below the boot stripe. My boat lives on a trailer also, so I used VC High Performance Epoxy paint which has worked out excellent. It is a very hard finish, excellent for trailering, and has a Teflon component, which makes it very fast, too. If you want to see pictures of mine, there are some on the web site under Raise the Montgomery, Larry Yake's method. (clever name, huh?) It made the boat look 100% better, especially when she's heeled over! ;-)
Larry Yake M17 #200 Tullamore "In a power boat you get there faster. In a sailboat you're already there."
On Thu, 6 Nov 2003 14:15:47 -0800 Bill Sylvester <wmcsyl1@cox.net> writes:
Endelig has had numerous different applications of
bottom
paint and she looks pretty shabby below the water line. Since she will be a trailer boat, we are planning to not have any paint on her hull. Paint strippers that I have found say "Don't use on fiberglass!" Is there a paint stripper or method to get the old paint off without dulling the jell-coat? She also has patches of mussel hairs that are proving very tough to remove.
Thanks,
Bill
M-17 # 279 Endelig
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