anoccasionalyachtsman
Well-Known Member
Bought a 1980 dayboat last year which had been stored ashore for a while with a 'canvas' boom tent. Topsides not in great condition, but fine for its age. It had been dry sailed for all of its life so I'm epoxying before anti-fouling.
However... Above the waterline there are a couple of areas of blistering that have appeared over winter. The larger of them was underneath where a plastic tarpaulin was tight against it, the other in free air. The whole boat was out of direct sunlight.
Both areas are directly below points where water could have got between the gelcoat and paint - at the transom there was cracking in the filler at the hull/deck joint, and the area on the topsides is below where the chainplate emerges (chainplates are flat plates bonded to inner hull surface and come up through a cutout in the deck edge which is then filled - sealing the gap is known to be 'impossible' in the class) The paint covers this.
I've never seen this happen before. The blisters are water-filled, and I was able to lift a square foot off the transom with a wallpaper knife quite easily. the underlying surface doesn't look at all well keyed. The rest of the transom appears sound and I was able to sand back to a good wide feather edge - previous experience says that poorly applied paint won't take a feather edge - anyone disagree?
What I need if for you all to tell me that water penetration through cracks is quite common, always stays localised and that sanding back and recoating, as well as preventing further ingress will be good for decades.
My worst fear is that the paint is porous, the tarpaulin held water against it and therefore caused the topside blisters. Which means that keeping it afloat will result in maritime psoriasis and I'll be drummed out of the club that I've just joined. But you don't want to tell me that because the forum will, as usual, be completely positive and in full agreement..
However... Above the waterline there are a couple of areas of blistering that have appeared over winter. The larger of them was underneath where a plastic tarpaulin was tight against it, the other in free air. The whole boat was out of direct sunlight.
Both areas are directly below points where water could have got between the gelcoat and paint - at the transom there was cracking in the filler at the hull/deck joint, and the area on the topsides is below where the chainplate emerges (chainplates are flat plates bonded to inner hull surface and come up through a cutout in the deck edge which is then filled - sealing the gap is known to be 'impossible' in the class) The paint covers this.
I've never seen this happen before. The blisters are water-filled, and I was able to lift a square foot off the transom with a wallpaper knife quite easily. the underlying surface doesn't look at all well keyed. The rest of the transom appears sound and I was able to sand back to a good wide feather edge - previous experience says that poorly applied paint won't take a feather edge - anyone disagree?
What I need if for you all to tell me that water penetration through cracks is quite common, always stays localised and that sanding back and recoating, as well as preventing further ingress will be good for decades.
My worst fear is that the paint is porous, the tarpaulin held water against it and therefore caused the topside blisters. Which means that keeping it afloat will result in maritime psoriasis and I'll be drummed out of the club that I've just joined. But you don't want to tell me that because the forum will, as usual, be completely positive and in full agreement..
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