mullet
Well-Known Member
I recently bought an early 80s boat which was painted during its original finishing with multiple layers of epoxy paint below the waterline. In some areas there is now some blistering between the original gelcoat and the epoxy coating. The boat has been out of the water for at least a year and the hull moisture readings are good. The gelcoat that has been exposed by the blistering epoxy is in good condition with no sign of osmosis.
I originally planned to treat the affected areas by recoating with International Gelshield 200, which seems to be similar to the product applied at manufacture. However, further poking around reveals a number of other spots where this obviously happened previously and where the degraded epoxy coating was simply scraped off and then antifouling was applied directly to the gelcoat. This is the case on a small proportion of the hull, maybe 1500 sq cm. So the coating on the hull is inconsistent: most is grp-gelcoat-epoxy-antifouling. Some is only grp-gelcoat-antifouling (or grp-gelcoat-air where I've removed blisters).
Do you think I should be dealing with all the areas where the epoxy is gone (newly exposed, and the areas that have been antifouled over)? Someone previously decided not to bother with treating the degraded epoxy - I don't know if this was a reasonable approach (which implies I'd be going OTT with Gelshielding the newly blistered areas), or a bodge.
Or is there something else I should be considering? I think peeling the epoxy all over would probably be an overreaction, given the small area that is affected, and the apparently decent condition of the underlying gelcoat.
I originally planned to treat the affected areas by recoating with International Gelshield 200, which seems to be similar to the product applied at manufacture. However, further poking around reveals a number of other spots where this obviously happened previously and where the degraded epoxy coating was simply scraped off and then antifouling was applied directly to the gelcoat. This is the case on a small proportion of the hull, maybe 1500 sq cm. So the coating on the hull is inconsistent: most is grp-gelcoat-epoxy-antifouling. Some is only grp-gelcoat-antifouling (or grp-gelcoat-air where I've removed blisters).
Do you think I should be dealing with all the areas where the epoxy is gone (newly exposed, and the areas that have been antifouled over)? Someone previously decided not to bother with treating the degraded epoxy - I don't know if this was a reasonable approach (which implies I'd be going OTT with Gelshielding the newly blistered areas), or a bodge.
Or is there something else I should be considering? I think peeling the epoxy all over would probably be an overreaction, given the small area that is affected, and the apparently decent condition of the underlying gelcoat.