MapisM
Well-known member
Before storing the new to me toy, I stripped 14 years worth of antifoul from her GRP hull.
Sandblasted first, then finished by hand with fine orbit sander - a pretty good job indeed.
Now, I am considering whether to take the opportunity to give Coppercoat a try or not (leaning towards yes, but I'm not positive yet).
But before coming to that, I discussed with some "experts" whether it could also be worth epoxying the hull, which is now bone dry, for osmosis prevention.
And this opened a can of worms, so I thought to share what I heard and ask for your views/experiences on this matter.
As a premise, after sandblasting the antifoul to bare gelcoat, the hull appears in very good conditions.
Some small blisters were found along the spray rails, but according to everyone who saw the hull, they are more than likely due to microbubbles of air left between the gelcoat and the first GRP layer, back when the hull was built.
Under these bubbles, the fiberglass appears smooth and solid, with zero vinegar smell and ridiculously low humidity values, anywhere.
BUT, when discussing the "what now?" before re-antifouling the boat, I got radically different views.
The more widespread school of thought suggests to fill the blisters with an epoxy filler, and then give several hands of epoxy resin (Gelshield 200 being apparently the most popular stuff for this job).
I' not expanding on this because I believe it's a rather well known type of treatment, for both osmosis cure and prevention.
But there were just a couple of folks (albeit arguably more qualified than the previous ones, which are more "hands-on" kind of guys) who suggested that epoxy treatments are way overrated, and their popularity among refitting yards is mostly due to the fact that they are easy and fast to make.
According to them, epoxy resins make sense only when the hull is already badly affected by osmosis, while they are not so good for prevention alone.
Reason being that epoxy does not chemically bond with the hull surface, but just micro-attaches mechanically to any surface irregularities.
In turn, this means that the adhesion on a very smooth surface is poor, and prone to detach over time.
Now, of course gelcoat, when a bit old and after being sandblasted, becomes a bit porous and surely offers a better grip, compared to a brand new and shiny boat.
But the reasoning still stands, in principle.
So, in their opinion, for a hull which is essentially sound, it's better to use a vinylester resin, which grants a better/stronger chemical bonding, for minor re-touching wherever necessary.
After that, they recommend a new coat of gelcoat on the whole bottom.
Costwise, the differences are neither here nor there, in the grand scheme.
But the two routes are obviously very different, and needless to say I'd rather choose the best/more longlasting one.
As a side consideration, I'm also wondering if going for epoxy alone vs. vinylester+gelcoat can somehow affect/restrict the choice of going for Coppercoat vs. traditional a/f afterwards.
On this specific point, nobody gave me a firm/reasoned suggestion, though this probably has to see with the fact that CC is not popular at all, around here.
Actually, one thing I remember from a previous debate is that since CC uses a water based resin, it's not compatible with solvented epoxies.
But I guess that this is just a matter of using an appropriate product if going for epoxy, while I don't think there's any restriction to applying CC over gelcoat.
Happy to stand corrected from those in the know, though - TIA for your comments!
Sandblasted first, then finished by hand with fine orbit sander - a pretty good job indeed.
Now, I am considering whether to take the opportunity to give Coppercoat a try or not (leaning towards yes, but I'm not positive yet).
But before coming to that, I discussed with some "experts" whether it could also be worth epoxying the hull, which is now bone dry, for osmosis prevention.
And this opened a can of worms, so I thought to share what I heard and ask for your views/experiences on this matter.
As a premise, after sandblasting the antifoul to bare gelcoat, the hull appears in very good conditions.
Some small blisters were found along the spray rails, but according to everyone who saw the hull, they are more than likely due to microbubbles of air left between the gelcoat and the first GRP layer, back when the hull was built.
Under these bubbles, the fiberglass appears smooth and solid, with zero vinegar smell and ridiculously low humidity values, anywhere.
BUT, when discussing the "what now?" before re-antifouling the boat, I got radically different views.
The more widespread school of thought suggests to fill the blisters with an epoxy filler, and then give several hands of epoxy resin (Gelshield 200 being apparently the most popular stuff for this job).
I' not expanding on this because I believe it's a rather well known type of treatment, for both osmosis cure and prevention.
But there were just a couple of folks (albeit arguably more qualified than the previous ones, which are more "hands-on" kind of guys) who suggested that epoxy treatments are way overrated, and their popularity among refitting yards is mostly due to the fact that they are easy and fast to make.
According to them, epoxy resins make sense only when the hull is already badly affected by osmosis, while they are not so good for prevention alone.
Reason being that epoxy does not chemically bond with the hull surface, but just micro-attaches mechanically to any surface irregularities.
In turn, this means that the adhesion on a very smooth surface is poor, and prone to detach over time.
Now, of course gelcoat, when a bit old and after being sandblasted, becomes a bit porous and surely offers a better grip, compared to a brand new and shiny boat.
But the reasoning still stands, in principle.
So, in their opinion, for a hull which is essentially sound, it's better to use a vinylester resin, which grants a better/stronger chemical bonding, for minor re-touching wherever necessary.
After that, they recommend a new coat of gelcoat on the whole bottom.
Costwise, the differences are neither here nor there, in the grand scheme.
But the two routes are obviously very different, and needless to say I'd rather choose the best/more longlasting one.
As a side consideration, I'm also wondering if going for epoxy alone vs. vinylester+gelcoat can somehow affect/restrict the choice of going for Coppercoat vs. traditional a/f afterwards.
On this specific point, nobody gave me a firm/reasoned suggestion, though this probably has to see with the fact that CC is not popular at all, around here.
Actually, one thing I remember from a previous debate is that since CC uses a water based resin, it's not compatible with solvented epoxies.
But I guess that this is just a matter of using an appropriate product if going for epoxy, while I don't think there's any restriction to applying CC over gelcoat.
Happy to stand corrected from those in the know, though - TIA for your comments!