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It is a well-known fact that he who resorts to name-calling
or profanity first has acknowledged he has lost the argument. A nice thank you offered for educating you would have been more manly CN "DSK" wrote in message .. . Capt. Neal® wrote: Duh, Blistered paint at the waterline is caused by osmosis, unless you find those blisters filled with air. Is that what happened to your head? DSK |
In article ,
=?iso-8859-1?Q?Capt._Neal=AE?= wrote: It is a well-known fact that he who resorts to name-calling or profanity first has acknowledged he has lost the argument. Hahahahaha.... talk about the pot calling the kettle black.... -- Jonathan Ganz (j gan z @ $ail no w.c=o=m) http://www.sailnow.com "If there's no wind, row." |
Well if you can't get it what's the point of suggesting it? You might
have just as well said it burns better than steel. Now if you want to corrode steel just sprinkle salt on it... Cheers Capt. Neal® wrote: It's Popular Science magazine - an established and reputable publication. Photos don't lie unless doctored in Photoshop. The article says mercury paste was used. That means it's available. Just because I personally don't know where to get it is not germane to the situation at hand. Where's your logic lately? CN "Nav" wrote in message ... I don't doubt that Hg attacks Al - asked you where you get Hg paste. Cheers Capt. Neal® wrote: He Read it and weep. http://www.popsci.com/popsci/how2/ar...693558,00.html "Nav" wrote in message ... Capt. Neal® wrote: Aluminum is relatively worthless for a boat hull. All it takes to completely destroy the hull of an aluminum hulled vessel is a handful of mercury past smeared on it. It will begin to turn to dust within hours, break apart and sink. Hahahha. A handful of mercury? A stainless steel boat is impervious to just about anything but strong acids. How about salt water and time? Cheers |
You have no gel coat?
Cheers DSK wrote: Capt. Neal® wrote: No osmosis? Then how on God's green Earth do you think those little blisters formed? Easy. Some bonehead (possibly a relative of yours) did not do the correct surface prep on the hull. Then another person of approximately the same mental capacity sanded through the barrier coat, allowing water between the fiberglass and the layers of paint. Osmotic blisters in fiberglass are a totally different thing from blistered paint, which can occur on cars or houses... DSK |
Nav wrote:
You have no gel coat? Well, I'd be the better for losing a few pounds... oh you mean the boat... No. The tugboat was peeled & barrier coated long ago. There is a brief and ambiguous line in the maintenance log that I think refers to it. Anyway, the barrier coat may not have been well applied or it may have failed due to subsequent poor handling... grinding through it in a few dozen small spots is not good. However, the fiberglass is all perfectly sound. There was no osmosis into the laminate at all... in fact, not even any stranded spots (places where the mat wasn't saturated with resin). Very careful and close inspection of the whole thing, including the thru-hulls and rudder post aperture, revealed no trouble. I'm confident that our coating was put on correctly (if yoou want something done right etc etc) and the hull is both perfectly sound & well protected for the future. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
Here we peel boats only to fix osmosis problems so, was that the case?
Cheers DSK wrote: Nav wrote: You have no gel coat? Well, I'd be the better for losing a few pounds... oh you mean the boat... No. The tugboat was peeled & barrier coated long ago. There is a brief and ambiguous line in the maintenance log that I think refers to it. Anyway, the barrier coat may not have been well applied or it may have failed due to subsequent poor handling... grinding through it in a few dozen small spots is not good. However, the fiberglass is all perfectly sound. There was no osmosis into the laminate at all... in fact, not even any stranded spots (places where the mat wasn't saturated with resin). Very careful and close inspection of the whole thing, including the thru-hulls and rudder post aperture, revealed no trouble. I'm confident that our coating was put on correctly (if yoou want something done right etc etc) and the hull is both perfectly sound & well protected for the future. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 00:49:47 GMT, "Scout"
wrote this crap: It may be mixed with tuna fat to form a handy paste. I've never seen fat tunas. Pathetic Earthlings! No one can save you now! |
Capt. Neal® wrote:
Aluminum is relatively worthless for a boat hull. Is your new incarnation some sort of Jax spawn? You sound more like him every post. Rick |
Nav wrote:
Here we peel boats only to fix osmosis problems so, was that the case? How would I know? It was years ago. It's possible, but it's also possible that the gelcoat was peeled in excessnzeal. In any event, the fiberglass of the hull is perfectly sound and shows not the slightest trace of osmosis. You can see the surface quite well in many of our boatyard pictures; and also see most of the stages of our application of a new barrier coat. Why are you so worried about it? I suggest you read http://www.yachtsurvey.com/blisters.htm it's certainly not the whole story, but it's a good start. DSK |
Capt. Neal® wrote in message news:311ngtF368ot9U1@uni-
I would go whole hog and have it made from stainless steel. After all, the premise is you won the lottery and money is no object. CN Hog wild would be Nickle copper, you would never have to put on bottom paint. Joe |
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