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BS........It was poliglow...Bought it direct from them and their silly
red canoe at a boat show.... It did take a long time to remove it because I was stupid enough to put it on a 50' sportfish...Of course they found the claims groundless... they make their money selling this snakeoil. One good thing about the company... after it turned yellow, they did send me an extra quarter of remover for free.... Did practical Sailor test it in Florida where we actually have about 300+ days of sunshine a year? Don't believe everying you read.... It might last for years when your boat sits in a shed 8 months out of the year but in the real world of 12 month boating it didn't hold up. Mys Terry wrote: On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 07:10:23 -0400, Ed wrote: Unless you are selling the boat to your mother-in-law I highly don't reccomend using EITHER one...... I used it on a boat several years ago.... Looked great...used it 6 months later..... 6 months after that, the boat turned yellow and it took DAYS to get that CR__ off my boat... If it took you days to remove poliglow, you simply didn't follow the (so easy any moron could follow them) directions. I've stripped two boats and it was very easy. Practical Sailor magazine has rated Poliglow "number one" for years. They say they have heard stories about people having trouble removing it, but they found those reports to be completely groundless. If your boat turned yellow, you didn't use Poliglow anyway. Practical Sailor has conducted long term testing and they confirm that it does not yellow at all. stick to wax.... You are stuck, alright! |
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