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"Skip Gundlach" wrote:
Hi, grandma, and group, Rosalie B. wrote: Jere Lull wrote: In article .com, "Skip Gundlach" wrote: The plot thickens (like epoxy in hot weather)... Our boat is covered in poorly repaired blisters. I don't know how, if you hauled the boat for survey and had any kind of competent surveyor you got a boat that you didn't know was blistered Did I say that i didn't know about them? The boat was represented to us as no-blisters, and on haulout, I was nearly ready to walk. As it was, i sulked through most of the sea trial, I was so bummed. OK - that wasn't clear and I didn't remember that, or maybe I missed it. What had me bummed was two things: It obviously wasn't "no blisters" - and what was there was poorly repaired prior blisters, or poor application of the barrier coat or both. The blisters we saw mostly went "thock" rather than squish (well, I can't say that *any* went "squish"). Now, on sanding or grinding them, they're nearly all dry - but definitely blistered. Only a few have had a chemical smell to them, which, because the boat has been on the hard for more than 2 years, clearly shows that the problem was under the barrier coat in those. Worse, most of the time, we see prior blue marks from where someone used a sharpie over the red coat to mark the blister. Some of these are substantially under the barrier coat - thus the "thock" when you hit it. Others of them just make a dull sound where there used to be, all around it, sharp report. After all that, though, like most blisters, and as Pascoe points out, it's not a structural issue. It's just "do it right" so we don't have to do it again. It's a pain in the neck, but the exterior of this boat will look as new, so we might as well get the bottom while we're donig it. When we bought our boat it was 20 years old. The PO had peeled the bottom and put on 20 coats of epoxy IIRC. When we hauled it for the survey, the surveyor said there were 'cosmetic' blisters - he pointed them out to me, and I saw them. We decided to do nothing. We've never seen the blisters again. Resisting the obvious question of haulouts or inspection, I presume you must be very lucky. Having a blister disappear isn't nearly as common as having more occur after barrier coating, AFIK. We bought the boat in 1998. We had it in the water (brackish) through the 98-99 winter because the marina had no capability for hauling our size boat. In April 99 we cashed in a boat haul and wash that we won at the boat show the previous October, and then put it back in the water where it stayed for that summer. The following winter (1999-2000), we hauled for the winter. After that we went down the ICW in the winter two years, and came back in the spring, hauled and painted the bottom and put the boat back in again each year. The next time we hauled for the winter was 2002-2003 right after Bob's heart attack. Bob figured the blisters (which were small - about the size of a quarter) were incompletely adhered paint and in the outer paint skin only and they probably wore off. I KNOW I saw them and they are mentioned in the survey report. (Otherwise Bob might be inclined to tell me I was delusional.) I know I've never seen them again. The max we've seen are a couple around the waterline at the edge of the epoxy coat. We've always had the boat either red or blue (alternatively), because we heard that whales don't like black hulled boats or another color that I can't remember what it is. Hm. I'd not heard that. The current coat is blue, and Lydia wants to go back over, once the blisters are repaired, and those spots touched up, with black. I'm not sure how many whale problems there are in the Caribbean, so I don't know that it's worth worrying about, but, then again, the Caribbean, as seen in some of the mailing lists of which I'm part, may not be so safe for other more political reasons. So, we're going to fix them all, put blue over all the repairs, and then put a very heavy application of new ablative, with more on the waterline and rudder, accompanied by PropSpeed on the running gear, which is new between the tranny and the prop, dripless packing included (Thanks, Roger!). Due to all the repairs which have been done by that time, once all the repairs have been overcoated after fairing, we'll give a toothcoat sanding to all of it and then commence to bottom painting while Lydia does the Poli-Glow. News at 11, so to speak, in my usual voluminous galleries. Current project(s) are rewiring the forward bilge pump, relocating and replumbing the aft bilge pump, and hardpiping the aft head (along with new supply hose and new cockpit scupper monster hose, all of which lives under the aft head platform). Lydia's started her occasional mailing of the news of the day from the warm-fuzzy side in the google group Flying Pig Log, and I pop into the yahoogroup The Flying Pig Log less frequently but with more detailed and technical commentary, for those interested... L8R Skip and Lydia, sweltering in the St. Pete Hete Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at http://justpickone.org/skip/gallery/ Follow us at "Believe me, my young friend, there is *nothing*-absolutely nothing-half so much worth doing as simply messing, messing-about-in-boats; messing about in boats-or *with* boats. In or out of 'em, it doesn't matter. Nothing seems really to matter, that's the charm of it. Whether you get away, or whether you don't; whether you arrive at your destination or whether you reach somewhere else, or whether you never get anywhere at all, you're always busy, and you never do anything in particular; and when you've done it there's always something else to do, and you can do it if you like, but you'd much better not." |
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How to Repair the Bottom of a 1,000-lb Boat? | Boat Building |