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#1
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What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging
my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. A cleanser of some kind that will strip the wax, but not put micro scratches in the finish is what I have in mind. Then I'll re-wax and buff out. Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com |
#2
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Bob La Londe wrote:
What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. "Simple Green" seems to take wax off very effectively and it has no abrasive whatever. Normally to use as a cleaner we dilute it about 15:1 but to use it specifically to strip wax you might try a little stronger concentration. DSK |
#3
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 12:13:25 -0400, DSK wrote:
Bob La Londe wrote: What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. "Simple Green" seems to take wax off very effectively and it has no abrasive whatever. Normally to use as a cleaner we dilute it about 15:1 but to use it specifically to strip wax you might try a little stronger concentration. DSK I love Simple Green. It's not cheap, but it does a great job. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#4
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 12:13:25 -0400, DSK wrote:
Bob La Londe wrote: What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. "Simple Green" seems to take wax off very effectively and it has no abrasive whatever. Normally to use as a cleaner we dilute it about 15:1 but to use it specifically to strip wax you might try a little stronger concentration. DSK PS. But maybe that's what's stripping the wax off my boat! I use about a capful per gallon for normal washing. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#5
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"Simple Green" seems to take wax off very effectively and it has no
abrasive whatever. John H wrote: PS. But maybe that's what's stripping the wax off my boat! I use about a capful per gallon for normal washing. That's not a strong enough concentration (about 1:250) to take off the spider poop we get all around the outside of the boat, so we normally mix it stronger. It doesn't strip wax at that concentration but it sure doesn't do the wax any good, either. DSK |
#6
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 12:47:08 -0400, DSK wrote:
"Simple Green" seems to take wax off very effectively and it has no abrasive whatever. John H wrote: PS. But maybe that's what's stripping the wax off my boat! I use about a capful per gallon for normal washing. That's not a strong enough concentration (about 1:250) to take off the spider poop we get all around the outside of the boat, so we normally mix it stronger. It doesn't strip wax at that concentration but it sure doesn't do the wax any good, either. DSK Normally I'm just taking off salt spray. Keeping the boat in a boatel does away with most of the poop problems, unless I have it left out overnight for an early morning departure. If the walking area gets grease marks, I might just put a little on full strength, brush it around, let it set a few minutes, then brush it off with water. It is, as you said, great stuff. I discovered it when cleaning my motorcycle years ago. I've only recently started using it on the boat. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#7
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John H wrote:
Normally I'm just taking off salt spray. Plain ol' fresh water won't do that? ... Keeping the boat in a boatel does away with most of the poop problems Really? Don't they allow spiders into the boat stacks? If the walking area gets grease marks, I might just put a little on full strength, brush it around, let it set a few minutes, then brush it off with water. It is, as you said, great stuff. I discovered it when cleaning my motorcycle years ago. I've only recently started using it on the boat. I like it because it doesn't damage silicone or rubber parts like bleach does... I'd prefer to not keep any bleach... or other potentially dangerous cleaning agents and/or solvents... on the boat. I found out the hard way that the citrus based degreasers eat away lots of different parts. DON'T use that stuff on anything with any rubber or plastic parts! It sounds nice & natural but it's corrosive as h###. Fair Skies Doug King |
#8
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 08:59:09 -0700, "Bob La Londe"
wrote: What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. A cleanser of some kind that will strip the wax, but not put micro scratches in the finish is what I have in mind. Then I'll re-wax and buff out. Bob La Londe www.YumaBassMan.com In the Mustang groups, Dawn dish detergent is proclaimed to be a great wax remover. Nature seems to be doing a good enough job of removing the wax from my boat, so I haven't tried it. -- John H "All decisions are the result of binary thinking." |
#9
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Around 5/17/2005 8:59 AM, Bob La Londe wrote:
What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. A cleanser of some kind that will strip the wax, but not put micro scratches in the finish is what I have in mind. Dawn, or any other similar liquid dish soap, will strip that wax right off (Which is why you're not supposed to wash a car with dish soap unless you're planning to rewax). Simple Green will do the job too, but it's a bit overkill. -- ~/Garth - 1966 Glastron V-142 Skiflite: "Blue-Boat" "There is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats." -Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows |
#10
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On Tue, 17 May 2005 08:59:09 -0700, "Bob La Londe"
wrote: What is the best way to strip wax off the cap on my boat with out damaging my gel coat. I have a very very nice finish and I don't want to turn it milky by using an abrasive on it. A cleanser of some kind that will strip the wax, but not put micro scratches in the finish is what I have in mind. Then I'll re-wax and buff out. Muratic acid. Me and the wife http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/harkra...bum?.dir=/1323 |
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Stripping Wax | Boat Building | |||
Paint Stripping | General |