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I know you will deny it but I bet you either work for Poli-glow or own a
piece of it.... You are the ONLY one on these NGs supporting it.... everyone else is trashing it. Mys Terry wrote: On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 07:15:28 -0400, Ed wrote: WRONG..... I do NOT wax boats for a living.. .I just use them... Poliglow looks great for a year or two (Average ownership interval for most boat owners) but after a year or so it starts building up, turning yellow and then if you left it on long enough... yes aligator crazing. It took my longer to remove it that it did to have waxed my boat for those 2 years. ALSO... the diesel grunge somehow blended with it because I could not remove the diesel grunge on the transom without removing the poli-crap. My white hulled boat has had poliglow on it for 8 years, and there is no (NONE) yellowing. Practical Sailor has conducted long term testing of Poliglow and several competitors. They confirm that it does not yellow and they further report that they have heard the bogus claims about difficulty removing the product and found them to be, well, BOGUS. Roger Long wrote: I just asked the wax guy at my yard about stripping the wax before launch so I could put on Poli Glo in the water. He didn't want to do it. A pretty clear picture is emerging, 100% of people who make there living waxing boats say the Poli Glo and similar products will turn into an alligator mess in a few years that will cost a fortune to remove. So far, 100% of users reporting say it's great. Do I smell a conspiracy? Once assured that I just want a holding action to slow or halt further deterioration of my topside and am not trying to have the finish restored, he agreed to throw on a coat of wax. I'll probably go that route this year just because of the time and hassle factor. |
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Cleaning the hull | Cruising |