Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Look VERY carefully around the perimeter of the flaking area and on the
inside of the hull in the same place. This may be a sign of a fiberglass repair from previous damage. Look for any uneven areas in the glass and for signs of older gelcoat that may have a slightly different color. If no old damage evidence exists, the most likely cause is some foreign matter or impurity that got between the gel and glass during the buildup process. If the fibergalss isn't waterlogged (use a moisture meter), you can probably just paint over it without worry. James "KB" wrote in message . ca... Hi there I'm looking at a 1978 o'day 25 sailboat in very clean condition except for the gel coat flaking off on the inside of the port side of the hull. The starboard side is fine and the outside of the hull looks fine - no blistering or anything. It looks just like paint chips flaking off and it's exposed the fibreglass underneath. Please can someone let me know if this is cosmetic only or anything I should be concerned about? Thanks Kevin Bennett |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the input
I'm going to check it again. It's a beige color, shiny surface about 0.3mm thick (it the thickness of a couple of layers of an oil based paint). Flakes off just like dry paper, I could strip the inside of the hull in about 3 minutes with a screwdriver! Funny that it's not on the starboard side though - that side is fine. I wondered if it was a sign of inpact or something. As best I can tell the hull has not been repaired at all. In fact, for a '78 it's a very clean boat - much more presentable that many newer boats I've looked at. The guy that owned it before apparently had it for some time and maintained it rigorously. Sadly he passed away, but his legacy lives on I guess. Cheers KB "Steve" wrote in message ... There are a couple possibilities here. It may not even be gel coat since the OEM may have just sprayed paint onto the interior surface of the molded hull.. And the area you see flaking didn't have the wax (surfacing agent) removed. This stuff is always present in the final resin applications of the layup process. If it is gel coat resin, then the probable cause, again, is the OEM neglected to clean the surface of this wax. Odinary paint often flakes off interior glass surface, over time, due to the dampness of the glass surface or due to improper priming. If the stuff that is coming off doesn't cantain any glass fibers, the I don't see this as a structural problem. -- My opinion and experience. FWIW Steve s/v Good Intentions |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Cathodic Protection for Aluminum Hull - Need Help | General | |||
Need help with hull repair | General | |||
depth finder "Inside" alum hull | General | |||
depth finder "Inside" alum hull | General | |||
Hull speed theory? | Boat Building |