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"Armond Perretta" wrote in message
... Armond Perretta wrote (on 25 April 2009): I have been using Pettit Trinidad on my 28 foot sloop for many years (1981 boat purchased new). When we haul, the boat is pressure-washed, and then in the Spring the loose stuff is scraped off and the entire bottom wet-sanded with 80 wet-dry. I use a foam roller and about 3 quarts per coat on this full keel boat with a 22 foot waterline. At this rate every 3 years I've had enough paint on hand to avoid buying a new gallon. This routine has worked for many years, and even though the boat has never been taken down to bare glass, the buildup is not an apparent problem. In recent years the boat has been kept on the Jersey Shore in brackish water. This year I have decided to honor the titans of Wall Street and what remains of the financial system by "going cheap." I took a new gallon of Trinidad, split it in half into a new empty gallon can, added what appeared to be about one half quart of last year's paint, and then thinned each can to bring the volume to about three quarts in each one gallon can. This means the paint was thinned about 25 to 27 percent, which is well in excess of the manufacturer recommendations. In fact just about any source I can find would disagree with my approach and advise that I will end up with less than adequate protection. The only advantage to me is, of course, cutting my paint cost by half. I suppose I will find out in the Fall if this plan is practical, but I thought I'd throw it out there to see if anyone else does it this way or has similar experience. Last April I posted the above looking for comments and similar experiences. We hauled the boat yesterday and were able to determine how the highly thinned bottom paint performed. The short answer is: "Very well." This past summer we did an "average" amount of sailing based from New Jersey. We spent 3 weeks in southern New England and otherwise sailed approximately 2 to 3 times a week daysailing in and around Barnegat Bay. The boat is usually moored on the Toms River in what I would call brackish conditions, although we do have ocean access through several inlets quite nearby. I did not dive on or clean the hull during the season. When we pulled the boat we had a bit of slime but not much and certainly not more than on previous occasions using the same paint straight from the can. We had no barnacles on the paint, but they are out there as I had a few on the prop (which has pretty much always been the case since I don't make any effort to treat the prop). I would have to say that this thinning method works for me, as I am now going to get 2 paint jobs from one gallon on this 28 foot full keel sailboat. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare Stupid, stupid, stupid! What you are doing is spending more on haul outs than you save on paint. Your system requires an annual haul out and we all know those aren't cheap. They call this being penny wise and pound foolish across the other side of the Pond. If you would wake up and lay on two full gallons of bottom paint instead of being a cheapskate your bottom job would last five or more years. This assumes a hard, scrubable surfaces such as Petit Trinidad SR which is epoxy-based. This assumes the majority of coats placed on the high wear areas. Two gallons can give you 8-10 coats at the high wear areas along the boot stripe and down a couple feet, the entire rudder and extra on the leading trailing edges if it's a spade rudder. The bow shearwater area also needs 8-10 coats. The rest of the boat four or five coats will do. Why because you will have to clean the bottom after the first couple years with a scrub brush every four months or so to get rid of slime, algae and other soft growth. Also every year you can hit it with wet-dry fine sandpaper and burnish it underwater while snorkeling. This removes spent layers of biocide and renews the potency. I bet the boat yards love your advice but, really, it's quite shortsighted from an boat owner's standpoint. Wilbur Hubbard |
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