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I've got a 1" seam covered with fiberglass tape/epoxy. Spec surf ski.
I'd prefer to avoid painting it so that I can inspect it for cracking easily. Somebody suggested aluminized reflective tape as being the best UV barrier, but that seems a little too unaesthetic to me. I just tried plastic electrical tape and am having reservations. I can see light/dark areas through it... so I'm guessing UV will pass as easily or more easily than visible light. I thought of colored duct tape briefly, but it seems like the adhesive residue would partially defeat the ease-of-inspection. OTOH, this doesn't have to be forever. The boat in question is definitely on it's last legs - major separations of the hull/deck bond.... mainly I just want to nurse it along until I have the bucks to buy a new one. Anybody have some observations about the tape route? Am I obsessing over nothing? Can somebody ballpark the failure time/mode of the epoxy resin in terms of hours of UV exposure? My mylar windsurfing sails start to get failure-prone after about 300 hours of UV exposure in the mid-Atlantic - and there's no way this thing is going to get 300 hours before being junked. If tape isn't going to work out, will any old black enamel paint do the trick? -- PeteCresswell |
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