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#1
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It'
made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? |
#2
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
On Sun, 11 Apr 2010 13:16:01 -0500, "Dave"
wrote: I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It' made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? If you used a waterproof plywood, either marine grade or exterior grade you can use about any paint that doesn't wash off. Two of my Uncles built a car top fishing boat out of waterproof fir plywood. Painted it with some sort of enamel paint. Used it every weekend during fishing season. Between fishing trips it was stored in the garage. The older Uncle died some 15 years later and the boat was still serviceable. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
#3
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
Dave wrote:
I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It' made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? best to seal with 2 coats of solvent thinned epoxy or moisture cured urethane primer, then ext. latex.... paul - progressive epoxy polymers inc |
#4
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
"Paul Oman" wrote in message m... Dave wrote: I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It' made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? best to seal with 2 coats of solvent thinned epoxy or moisture cured urethane primer, then ext. latex.... paul - progressive epoxy polymers inc I was also fiberglassing the seams today on the boat. Is it possible to use the Resin without the fiberglass for/as a paint? |
#5
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010 07:13:06 -0500, "Dave"
wrote: "Paul Oman" wrote in message om... Dave wrote: I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It' made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? best to seal with 2 coats of solvent thinned epoxy or moisture cured urethane primer, then ext. latex.... paul - progressive epoxy polymers inc I was also fiberglassing the seams today on the boat. Is it possible to use the Resin without the fiberglass for/as a paint? Sure. In fact many people that build stitch and glue do exactly that. Tape the seams and use the rest of the pot to paint the plywood. However... epoxy has very little UV resistance so cover it with something else. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
#6
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
Sure. In fact many people that build stitch and glue do exactly that. Tape the seams and use the rest of the pot to paint the plywood. However... epoxy has very little UV resistance so cover it with something else. Cheers, Bruce Thanks, Next question: Using Exterior Latex, what would be a good bonding agent for the Resin? Latex Primer? |
#7
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
On Mon, 12 Apr 2010 16:59:11 -0500, "Dave"
wrote: Sure. In fact many people that build stitch and glue do exactly that. Tape the seams and use the rest of the pot to paint the plywood. However... epoxy has very little UV resistance so cover it with something else. Cheers, Bruce Thanks, Next question: Using Exterior Latex, what would be a good bonding agent for the Resin? Latex Primer? For a stitch and glue boat you should be using epoxy as for sticking things together it is so much stronger. Most of the epoxy sold for boat building develop a surface coating of a somewhat oily substance refereed to as "blush" which has to be removed before additional coats of anything are applied. This can be done by sanding it by washing, if washing you can use soap and water or my fiberglass mate's recipe of vinegar and water. Now we have eliminated the blush we have to deal with the slick, shiny surface that epoxy hardens to. Usually by sanding with about 220 grit paper. So... what you have ended up with is a 220 grit finish on a material that is pretty much impervious to your paint, i.e., the paint can't soak in. Probably much like painting that hard cement board (I believe it is refereed to as "dry wall") used to finish off the inside of houses. Frankly, I don't know a thing about house paint but I suspect that any primer that you can use over "cement board" and a paint that doesn't wash off will work. If the paint does fall off it just paint it with something else :-) Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
#8
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
"Bruce" wrote in message ... On Mon, 12 Apr 2010 16:59:11 -0500, "Dave" wrote: Sure. In fact many people that build stitch and glue do exactly that. Tape the seams and use the rest of the pot to paint the plywood. However... epoxy has very little UV resistance so cover it with something else. Cheers, Bruce Thanks, Next question: Using Exterior Latex, what would be a good bonding agent for the Resin? Latex Primer? For a stitch and glue boat you should be using epoxy as for sticking things together it is so much stronger. Most of the epoxy sold for boat building develop a surface coating of a somewhat oily substance refereed to as "blush" which has to be removed before additional coats of anything are applied. This can be done by sanding it by washing, if washing you can use soap and water or my fiberglass mate's recipe of vinegar and water. Now we have eliminated the blush we have to deal with the slick, shiny surface that epoxy hardens to. Usually by sanding with about 220 grit paper. So... what you have ended up with is a 220 grit finish on a material that is pretty much impervious to your paint, i.e., the paint can't soak in. Probably much like painting that hard cement board (I believe it is refereed to as "dry wall") used to finish off the inside of houses. Frankly, I don't know a thing about house paint but I suspect that any primer that you can use over "cement board" and a paint that doesn't wash off will work. If the paint does fall off it just paint it with something else :-) Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) Thanks for the assistance.. |
#10
posted to rec.boats.building
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Paint
On Wed, 14 Apr 2010 11:20:14 -0400, I am Tosk
wrote: In article , says... Dave wrote: I'm building a 9 foot wooden flat bottom boat for myself and the kids. It' made out of 3/8" plywood from Home Depot and we're probably going to use it about every other weekend in the water. Where I'm at it's mostly salt water area (Gulf). My question is: Will normal Latex Exterior house paint will work? best to seal with 2 coats of solvent thinned epoxy or moisture cured urethane primer, then ext. latex.... paul - progressive epoxy polymers inc With all due respect, that is not the way to go. I am going to assume he used regular exterior ply and it is more vulnerable to moisture damage than BS1088 or similar. If he coats it with two coats of thinned epoxy, moisture that gets in (and it will) can not get out. Wooden boats are best done old school with paint and sealer. A good wood primer, some sandpaper, and a couple coats of acrylic based paint, he doesn't want to use latex, at least on the outside, inside is ok... Let the wood breathe and the boat will last a lot longer... Scotty, just my opinion. I think it depends on many things. did any scrapes or dings damage the boat? Dragged it up on the beach and wore all the coating off the bottom? But your assertion that somehow moisture penetrates in through the epoxy and can't get out just isn't logical - there is no one way valves in the epoxy :-) My own experience seems quite different from yours. For example, I built an 8 ft. dinghy using exterior grade plywood some ten years ago.. Tapped the joints and covered the outside of the bottom with IIRC 400 gm cloth. The rest of the boat was painted with epoxy, epoxy primer, two part polyurethane. Some eight years after I built it a bloke walked by the dinghy, bottom side up in the dock in front of my sailboat, and started to admire it. finally said, "would I sell it?". I did immediately, and I saw the boat, now 10 years + old, still being used just the other day. Of course, my boat is/was used in salt water which is somewhat of a preservative, or perhaps preventative, as far as dry rot goes, but still, a ten year + life for a 8 ft. two sheet of plywood, dinghy does seem satisfactory, or at least value for money. Of course, just painting works also. I believe I have mentioned a fishing boat they two Uncles built from exterior grade fir plywood. Kept in the garage and used a day or two every week during fishing season that was still usable after 15 years. .. Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
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