Mark-1
Well-Known Member
I don't think Mark-1 has the quote "There are absolutely no osmotic forces involved" correctly attributed.
It's not a direct quote but I'm fairly certain that HdP rules osmosis out. From memory HdP says the process involved cannot be osmosis or at very least it cannot start out as osmosis. IIRC he says that this is because salt water is a strong solution and in the early stages (if the process really were osmosis) then the process would work the opposite way round.
Maybe someone with the book to hand can confirm or correct my feeble memory.
HdP is one of many people around (eg on the web), who recommend individual grinding back of blisters (up the the several hundreds mark) in preference to replacing the gel coat. This is something that can be done by the owner. His remarks about cowboys removing glassfibre up to an inch deep by the enthusiastic application of sand blasters makes that seem preferable even if you have to do some every year.
That's my recollection too. I think he says that when the yards skim back layers of the GRP they're taking off a more or less unknown quantity of material and putting back a more or less unknown quantity of material. Certainly convinced me that less is more in terms of osmosis treatment.
Please, nobody take my memory as gospel - get hold of the book yourself.