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#1
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
My S2 sailboat is 27 yrs old and the gelcoat is badly chalking. Today
when we went to clean her, the water all round her was milky with the stuff from the gelcoat. The gelcoat has numerous tiny stress cracks and thin spots. Over the years, I have tried various polishes with very little luck. I think that with a lot of work, something could be done to remove the oxidation and then cover the surface with some sort of wax or other barrier but this is an extreme amount of work. I have considered re-painting her topsides but I have never seen this work well, often it flakes or soon looks worse than the original. The new coat rarely covers the old stress cracks either. Is there a solution to this? I have used a water or alchohol thinned two part epoxy primer on my home built boats and it adheres very well and I wonder if this stuff will work as a deck paint over gelcoat. |
#2
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 19:56:30 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: My S2 sailboat is 27 yrs old and the gelcoat is badly chalking. Today when we went to clean her, the water all round her was milky with the stuff from the gelcoat. The gelcoat has numerous tiny stress cracks and thin spots. Over the years, I have tried various polishes with very little luck. I think that with a lot of work, something could be done to remove the oxidation and then cover the surface with some sort of wax or other barrier but this is an extreme amount of work. I have considered re-painting her topsides but I have never seen this work well, often it flakes or soon looks worse than the original. The new coat rarely covers the old stress cracks either. Is there a solution to this? I have used a water or alchohol thinned two part epoxy primer on my home built boats and it adheres very well and I wonder if this stuff will work as a deck paint over gelcoat. Having had this problem with both cars and boats I can tell you that once the coating, be it paint or gel coat, begins to craze the only solution is to sand it all off, right down to solid material, fiberglass in the case of a boat. Patch any dings and spray on a couple of coats of high build epoxy primer. Sand smooth and wash clean and paint with 2 part polyurethane (NOT epoxy). I can also assure you, from experience, that any band-aid "fix" that doesn't include sanding off all the damaged coating is doomed to failure, either sooner, or later. Cheers, Bruce |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
You could sand it down below the damaged gelcoat and spray on new
gelcoat. Then sand and polish that. It is a huge job. Unfortunately, there is no substitute for elbow grease. On the other hand you cold use Polyglow. On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 19:56:30 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: My S2 sailboat is 27 yrs old and the gelcoat is badly chalking. Today when we went to clean her, the water all round her was milky with the stuff from the gelcoat. The gelcoat has numerous tiny stress cracks and thin spots. Over the years, I have tried various polishes with very little luck. I think that with a lot of work, something could be done to remove the oxidation and then cover the surface with some sort of wax or other barrier but this is an extreme amount of work. I have considered re-painting her topsides but I have never seen this work well, often it flakes or soon looks worse than the original. The new coat rarely covers the old stress cracks either. Is there a solution to this? I have used a water or alchohol thinned two part epoxy primer on my home built boats and it adheres very well and I wonder if this stuff will work as a deck paint over gelcoat. |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
Pirateer guy wrote:
You could sand it down below the damaged gelcoat and spray on new gelcoat. Then sand and polish that. It is a huge job. True, but you can make it less of a job by painting it rather than spraying new gelcoat. Unfortunately, there is no substitute for elbow grease. Sad, but true. On the other hand you cold use Polyglow. I think he actually wants to FIX it... ;-) On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 19:56:30 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch wrote: My S2 sailboat is 27 yrs old and the gelcoat is badly chalking. Today when we went to clean her, the water all round her was milky with the stuff from the gelcoat. The gelcoat has numerous tiny stress cracks and thin spots. Over the years, I have tried various polishes with very little luck. I think that with a lot of work, something could be done to remove the oxidation and then cover the surface with some sort of wax or other barrier but this is an extreme amount of work. I have considered re-painting her topsides but I have never seen this work well, often it flakes or soon looks worse than the original. The new coat rarely covers the old stress cracks either. Is there a solution to this? I have used a water or alchohol thinned two part epoxy primer on my home built boats and it adheres very well and I wonder if this stuff will work as a deck paint over gelcoat. |
#5
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
On Jan 24, 10:56*pm, Frogwatch wrote:
My S2 sailboat is 27 yrs old and the gelcoat is badly chalking. *Today when we went to clean her, the water all round her was milky with the stuff from the gelcoat. *The gelcoat has numerous tiny stress cracks and thin spots. *Over the years, I have tried various polishes with very little luck. *I think that with a lot of work, something could be done to remove the oxidation and then cover the surface with some sort of wax or other barrier but this is an extreme amount of work. *I have considered re-painting her topsides but I have never seen this work well, often it flakes or soon looks worse than the original. *The new coat rarely covers the old stress cracks either. *Is there a solution to this? I have used a water or alchohol thinned two part epoxy primer on my home built boats and it adheres very well and I wonder if this stuff will work as a deck paint over gelcoat. Clapped-out junk, just like the owner. |
#6
posted to rec.boats.building
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Taking care of an older boat
You must be a really nice guy to be around
Clapped-out junk, just like the owner. |
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