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HK September 4th 08 08:21 PM

Painting a boat..
 
wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 11:34 am, hk wrote:





wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.
Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.
Later, Scotty
You used flat house paint on a boat? :)
When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.
But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.
At least you got the aisle right, eh?
BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.

Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...




Hehehehe.

Loogy the Idiot.


HK September 4th 08 08:23 PM

Painting a boat..
 
wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 11:34 am, hk wrote:





wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.
Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.
Later, Scotty
You used flat house paint on a boat? :)
When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.
But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.
At least you got the aisle right, eh?
BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.

Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...



We always used Petit boat paint on our plywood boats.

DK September 5th 08 01:09 AM

Painting a boat..
 
SmallBoats.com wrote:
Ok, I am picking up this thread at Genes, with my agent. I have salty
and harry blocked here, so we can have a discussion...



On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 12:48:50 -0300, "Don White"
wrote:

"hk" wrote in message
. ..
wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.

Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.

Later, Scotty

You used flat house paint on a boat? :)

When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was before
the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on paint, not
rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on bottom paint on
the smaller boats.

But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so I
guess it doesn't make a difference.

At least you got the aisle right, eh?

BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.

I hope it was at least 'oil based' paint.


Well you *are* top posting, but you are also illustrating that Donnie
"the dip****" isn't getting any smarter. And a one-liner, too? Who
would have thought??

SmallBoats.com September 5th 08 03:57 AM

Painting a boat..
 
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 15:09:28 -0400, John H wrote:

On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 08:23:39 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.

Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.

Later, Scotty


WHERE ARE THE FRIGGIN' PICTURES?

Are they at Chuck's Island? If not, please put them there!


I figured I might let all the google experts and friends of friends
tell us what they have found.. Apparently, my experiences don't fall
in line.. ;) Everybody is an expert already...

John H[_3_] September 5th 08 11:58 AM

Painting a boat..
 
On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 22:57:02 -0400, SmallBoats.com
wrote:

On Thu, 04 Sep 2008 15:09:28 -0400, John H wrote:

On Thu, 4 Sep 2008 08:23:39 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.

Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.

Later, Scotty


WHERE ARE THE FRIGGIN' PICTURES?

Are they at Chuck's Island? If not, please put them there!


I figured I might let all the google experts and friends of friends
tell us what they have found.. Apparently, my experiences don't fall
in line.. ;) Everybody is an expert already...


Bull****. Show us the pictures already. Fugabuncha 'experts' like krause
and his kittens.

[email protected] September 5th 08 01:42 PM

Painting a boat..
 
On Sep 4, 3:15*pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29*pm, wrote:





On Sep 4, 11:34*am, hk wrote:


wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.


Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.


Later, Scotty


You used flat house paint on a boat? *:)


When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.


But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.


At least you got the aisle right, eh?


BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.


Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


That may well be, but the fact is, Harry was making, as usual an
ASSumption based on.....nothing.

[email protected] September 5th 08 02:09 PM

Painting a boat..
 
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 05:42:22 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

On Sep 4, 3:15*pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29*pm, wrote:





On Sep 4, 11:34*am, hk wrote:


wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.


Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.


Later, Scotty


You used flat house paint on a boat? *:)


When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.


But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.


At least you got the aisle right, eh?


BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.


Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


That may well be, but the fact is, Harry was making, as usual an
ASSumption based on.....nothing.


House paint is pretty much all they sell in the goof aisle of Home
Depot. It was a pretty safe assumption.




[email protected] September 5th 08 02:22 PM

Painting a boat..
 
On Sep 4, 3:23*pm, hk wrote:
wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 11:34 am, hk wrote:


wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.
Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.
Later, Scotty
You used flat house paint on a boat? *:)
When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.
But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.
At least you got the aisle right, eh?
BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.
Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...


We always used Petit boat paint on our plywood boats.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


No you didn't, or you would have said it yesterday. Everyone knows you
google every attack.... Lobsta' boat.. You never built a boat,
probably never painted one either....

John H[_3_] September 5th 08 02:25 PM

Painting a boat..
 
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 06:22:46 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

On Sep 4, 3:23*pm, hk wrote:
wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 11:34 am, hk wrote:


wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.
Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.
Later, Scotty
You used flat house paint on a boat? *:)
When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.
But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough...so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.
At least you got the aisle right, eh?
BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.
Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...


We always used Petit boat paint on our plywood boats.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


No you didn't, or you would have said it yesterday. Everyone knows you
google every attack.... Lobsta' boat.. You never built a boat,
probably never painted one either....


But he keeps pulling your chain!

Where are the pictures? I posted mine, now you post yours.

[email protected] September 5th 08 02:46 PM

Painting a boat..
 
On Sep 5, 9:09*am, wrote:
On Fri, 5 Sep 2008 05:42:22 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On Sep 4, 3:15*pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 1:29*pm, wrote:


On Sep 4, 11:34*am, hk wrote:


wrote:
Well, we got the sanding done and painted the inside of the Brockway
yesterday. Battleship grey was in the Goof isle at Home Depot,
perfect, flat, nice. It was pretty hot so I had to move quickly, but I
was using a power roller with a pad attachment too. Great for doing
the inside, does a much better job than the sprayers I have used in
the past. Rollers with a "tip" method brush is still the best way to
go for wood boats.


Time today to flip her over and do the bottom, that will be much
easier.


Later, Scotty


You used flat house paint on a boat? *:)


When I was painting wood boats, and I did a whole lot of that, since it
was the job for the relatively unskilled at the boat yard (this was
before the days of high tech paint), we used nice brushes to put on
paint, not rollers, so we could work in the paint. We even brushed on
bottom paint on the smaller boats.


But, if you're using flat house paint, it'll flake off soon enough....so
I guess it doesn't make a difference.


At least you got the aisle right, eh?


BTW, the word "isle" usually is used in reference to an geographical
island...a land mass surrounded by water.


Where in hell did he say he used house paint, dip****?
Also, I take it you've never heard of the tip method.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


But I did use housepaint, It's a plywood work boat, it just needs to
breathe...- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


That may well be, but the fact is, Harry was making, as usual an
ASSumption based on.....nothing.


House paint is pretty much all they sell in the goof aisle of Home
Depot. It was a pretty safe assumption.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Not at my Home Depot. There's all types of paint there.


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