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gelcoat
Michiel wrote:
So, I've used one of the little repair gelcoat repair kits and matching color was fun. Is it also possible to get gelcoat as a paint, a form you can spray or roll over old gelcoat, hopefully filling in little cracks and such? Is it hard to handle? Does it come out nice? I've used wonderful epoxy and lp paints, but I thought it'd be nice if gelcoat could be rejuvenated and sealed this way. Just wondering in case I'd decide to cut my deck open from the top. And yes, I did see somewhere that although epoxy adheres wonderful on top of epoxy, the reverse is not true, so I imagine you probably can't gelcoat an epoxy repair (not trying to feed the epoxy vs. polyester debate here). Michiel Gelcoat is just poly resin. I painted a rough dinghy made on an old wooden plug with a recipe. One cup resin, I think 13 drops of MEK, one pea sized blob of colour, a spoon of thickener. It was necessary to experiment, considering the environmental conditions. As the day warmed up, I think I reduced the MEK a little to get a little more brushing time from the mix. Gelcoat is usually sprayed inside a mould first, rather than painted on the outside, last. I used Continuous brush coats applied a cup at a time, for a few hours work in a summer carport shade. Beautiful, hard, self levelling finish 1/16 inch thick, on horizontal and vertical surfaces. No breeze, no dust. I don't think it would actually jump off if it were to be put over epoxy, but maybe a primer would help? On the 29 foot Tylercraft, I've got epoxy scars in the antiskid portside, where the chunks of top deck were dremelled off and replaced over plywood in lieu of rotten balsa, using epoxy and lots of silica gel, spongy, fizzy even, and fast to cure, too. I levelled the replaced sections with small adjusted screws under the recycled anti skid, wiping off most of the excess with polyethylene plastic bag "towels." I used a caulking gun and cobbled up elephant syringe to inject epoxy in the areas not uncovered but where rotten core was scooped out, jamming in new "core" pieces of plywood, rolling doobies of toothpaste epoxy in saran wrap, squeezed into the syringe. If epoxy sticks to polyester, how come polyester can't be said to stick to epoxy? Maybe it's all in the timing, which one cured first? This epoxy argument smacks of rabid fundamentalism, to me. As it is, Urethane deck paint seems to cover the flaws somewhat and has not yet chipped off along the seam lines, but only on the peaks of the anti skid, but then, I haven't been out there much with my hobnailed boots. It's only a one coat of a slightly different shade of blue, after all. Think of it as patina, character. I don't spitshine my hobnail boots, either. Function trumps beauty every time, me, nor I haven't fallen through the deck, neither, and the leaks are gone, too, whoohoo! Terry K |
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