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posted to rec.boats.cruising
Ed
 
Posts: n/a
Default Bottom Paint ,,, 20 layers of Bottom Paint ,,, how to removeit.

BAKING SODA Blasting is the latest thing.... $50/ft on average and your
bottom will look like new. I did sand blasting on my boat a few years
ago and 5 years later it needed a complete PEAL....

After removing all the bottom paint, start with 4 coats of 2000 and then
a coat or 2 of bottom paint.



MMC wrote:
I saw a 41' Island Trader that had the bottom blasted and the gelcoat was
pretty much destroyed, cracked and chunks missing. Hadn't seen that before
or since.
Think it might have been the quality of the gelcoat?
MMC
"Jim Conlin" wrote in message
...

Many years ago, we hired a yard to sandblast about 15 years of bottom


paint.

The resultant texture was a fine-grained sandstone. The first coat of


paint

filled it.
Thereafter, we sanded clean each year and ultimately switched to ablative
paint.
I'd suppose that there are less hostile blasting methods (walnut hulls,
soda?) and that a LOT depends on the care of the operator.
Were I to do it again, i'd instruct the operator to try for a 90% complete
job and i'd sand the rest.

\
"Ryk" wrote in message
. ..

On Tue, 28 Mar 2006 16:50:23 GMT, in message

"Dennis Pogson" wrote:


Most professionals use a heavy scraper if the paint is really hard and
brittle. It's a tiring job, but can be quicker than applying softener,


as

the paint flakes away in large chunks.

And be sure to get a scraper with a carbide blade. They out-perform
steel by a mile, especially if you don't an easy way to keep
resharpening the steel.

I used



http://www.leevalley.com/wood/page.a...90,43040,43041

but it is still a big job...

Ryk

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