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![]() "Dave" wrote in message ... On Thu, 09 Mar 2006 16:56:34 -0500, DSK said: My understanding is that ablative paint is still (relatively) effective as long as there remains a layer to slough (ablate) off to shed fouling. That's what I had always thought. But things I've read recently (including the Spring issue of Boat Works I picked up today) suggest otherwise. Who wrote the article? Let me guess--someone from Interlux or Petit? My experience says otherwise as well, since I had a pretty good amount of fouling this fall even on the areas where there was still plenty of bottom paint. Other boats hauled about the same time and at the same place had much less. One thing to bear in mind is that you have to take off all the old ablative paint if you want to put anything other than the same type of ablative on. I'd assume this holds true of putting copolymer ablative over older stuff. Not sure that's the case. Based on the info in the catalogs I've been looking at, it appears that the copolymer will go over regular ablative. The PO of my boat had used a basic ablative bottom paint, and since we had intended to strip the bottom in a year or so and do an epoxy barrier coat job, we really didn't care if the newer paint we were about to apply, an ablative co-polymer, adhered well or not. Fact is the overlaid co-polymer worked just fine and didn't slough off the old paint. FWIW. Max |
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