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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and
bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 9 Jul 2006 20:22:28 -0400, " JimH"
jimhUNDERSCOREosudad@yahooDOTcom wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! Oxalic acid. -- John H ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() JohnH wrote: On Sun, 9 Jul 2006 20:22:28 -0400, " JimH" jimhUNDERSCOREosudad@yahooDOTcom wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! Oxalic acid. -- John H ****************************************** ***** Have a Spectacular Day! ***** ****************************************** Thank you John! I will give it a try. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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JimH wrote:
I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! JimH, Scum Line Remover (Oxalic acid) Did you decide to change mechanics? One who forgets to change the impeller when asks and uses incorrect parts is an even more very expensive "accident" just around the corner. There is an old expression "Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, shame on me". -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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Reginald P. Smithers III wrote:
JimH wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! JimH, Scum Line Remover (Oxalic acid) Did you decide to change mechanics? One who forgets to change the impeller when asks and uses incorrect parts is an even more very expensive "accident" just around the corner. There is an old expression "Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, shame on me". -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! How many times do I have to tell you the he did not *forget* to change the impeller. Why are you so obsessed with this, especially bringing it up in a totally unrelated thread? |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() JimH wrote: Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: JimH wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! JimH, Scum Line Remover (Oxalic acid) Did you decide to change mechanics? One who forgets to change the impeller when asks and uses incorrect parts is an even more very expensive "accident" just around the corner. There is an old expression "Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, shame on me". -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! How many times do I have to tell you the he did not *forget* to change the impeller. Why are you so obsessed with this, especially bringing it up in a totally unrelated thread? But do you think that mechanic is a good one? After all, you did ask him to change it, and they didn't. After that, it failed, causing you engine to overheat. Overheating an engine is never, ever good for it. |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "basskisser" wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: JimH wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! JimH, Scum Line Remover (Oxalic acid) Did you decide to change mechanics? One who forgets to change the impeller when asks and uses incorrect parts is an even more very expensive "accident" just around the corner. There is an old expression "Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, shame on me". -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! How many times do I have to tell you the he did not *forget* to change the impeller. Why are you so obsessed with this, especially bringing it up in a totally unrelated thread? But do you think that mechanic is a good one? After all, you did ask him to change it, and they didn't. After that, it failed, causing you engine to overheat. Overheating an engine is never, ever good for it. I've decided that there are more good mechanics than we realize. The problem is that many of them are lousy teachers & communicators, and without those skills, a lot of repairs go badly. Example: My son and his girlfriend recently went to a concert 2 hours away, in her car. I said I wanted to look the car over before they left. Turned out she had 3 different brands/models of tires on the thing, and none of them had much life left in them. If rain had been in the forecast, I wouldn't have let them go in that car. She said she couldn't afford a set of tires. I told her to keep the one pair that matched (in the rear), and buy a matched pair for the front. Then, when she had the bucks, replace the rears. She said nobody at the tire stores had suggested this idea. It's exactly what my mechanic would've recommended, since he's a reasonable guy who prefers that his customers remain alive. |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"basskisser" wrote in message oups.com... JimH wrote: Reginald P. Smithers III wrote: JimH wrote: I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! JimH, Scum Line Remover (Oxalic acid) Did you decide to change mechanics? One who forgets to change the impeller when asks and uses incorrect parts is an even more very expensive "accident" just around the corner. There is an old expression "Fool me once, shame on you, Fool me twice, shame on me". -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! How many times do I have to tell you the he did not *forget* to change the impeller. Why are you so obsessed with this, especially bringing it up in a totally unrelated thread? But do you think that mechanic is a good one? After all, you did ask him to change it, and they didn't. After that, it failed, causing you engine to overheat. Overheating an engine is never, ever good for it. I've decided that there are more good mechanics than we realize. The problem is that many of them are lousy teachers & communicators, and without those skills, a lot of repairs go badly. Example: My son and his girlfriend recently went to a concert 2 hours away, in her car. I said I wanted to look the car over before they left. Turned out she had 3 different brands/models of tires on the thing, and none of them had much life left in them. If rain had been in the forecast, I wouldn't have let them go in that car. She said she couldn't afford a set of tires. I told her to keep the one pair that matched (in the rear), and buy a matched pair for the front. Then, when she had the bucks, replace the rears. She said nobody at the tire stores had suggested this idea. It's exactly what my mechanic would've recommended, since he's a reasonable guy who prefers that his customers remain alive. Doug, I have always told my mechanics I expect them to treat me the way they would their mother (that is if they loved their mother). I expect them to make recommendation that will save me money, in the long run. I also tell them if I catch them making recommendations to "make work", I will find another mechanic. I tend to keep my cars and boats longer than some, so I want them well maintained. JimH thought I was being obsessed with his impeller, but that is a perfect example of situation that others, especially someone new to boating can learn from, and is a great on topic discussion. Changing an impeller every other year, is very cheap insurance. A mechanic who checks an impeller by running the engine for an hour, and determines the impeller of unknown age does not need to be changed because the water temp remained at at safe level, is one that a reasonable boater should run from. I was told you really can't tell how "safe" an impeller is by feeling it, it should just be replaced either annually or every other year at the very latest. When a mechanic tries to recommend new part specs for an engine, it is time to look for another mechanic. This conversation is not for JimH because he is not interested, but these are two glaring examples of when I know I would look for another mechanic. -- Reggie That's my story and I am sticking to it! |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() " JimH" jimhUNDERSCOREosudad@yahooDOTcom wrote in message . .. I misjudged the waterline on my boat when I applied the epoxy barrier and bottom paint. I will not try to fix the epoxy barrier coat coverage but I will be raising the bottom paint line when I put the boat on the trailer (in preparation for our vacation on Put-In-Bay) next week. So how do you remove the scum line? I have brushed it off every time I have been in the water and washing down the boat and outdrive, but a scum line remains. TIA! Orbital sander and 60 grit sandpaper works on my boat! ![]() |
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