Elessar
Well-Known Member
We had her sand blasted 4y ago when she was 23yo, right before we mounted the fin stabs,
Around the stabs, we have added extra layers of grp, so in that zone she had to be sanded to bare grp anyway.
Blue Angel had many layers of old hard antifouling, at least 6 layers with different colors,
Apart from the esthetics, and the smoothness of the hull, another argument was the weight of the paint,
In a rough calculation about 500kg of old paint went off.
After sand blasting, The yard has put a epoxy coating (by hand) , and Micron77 antifouling
And since then, each year, we had her pressure washed, antifouling nearly completely off, coating stay’s intact
and place just one new layer of Micron 77
Now I have one concern,
When we purchased the boat in 2011 she had zero osmosis (confirmed by the surveyer)
One season after the sand blasting we discovered (actually the painter did) a few spots of osmosis in the zone between the props.
I believe they did only “one” layer of epoxy hull coating,
Could the sand blasting / not enough layers of epoxy, be a reason for these spots of osmosis or is it just age of the boat ?
Unfortunately I have no better contribution/ answer to your thread / question
No 23 year old boat that has no epoxy has zero osmosis. It's just hasn't developed into osmotic blistering. Sometimes the epoxy can induce the blistering as it seals the boat.
But are you sure it's osmotic blistering - it could be poor adhesion of the epoxy to the hull. It looks identical.
So first step is burst a bubble and taste the fluid in it. Vinegar = osmosis. Salt = poor adhesion.
If its the latter scrape, sand and re-epoxy the area.
If its the former din't worry it worn't sink. I'd dremel out the holes, wash them out every day for a couple of weeks and fill with epoxy filler. Then epoxy around the area you think is thin. It might get worse, or it might not, depending on how localised it is.