Tranona
Well-Known Member
The osmosis just adds to the workload.
So basically if I can negotiate enough to pay for all or most of just a professional sand/grind down, I'll do that next winter and be done with it. Then I can get on with everything else it needs.
Of course that would require me to do all of the painting to build it back up. But I should be in better shape by then and of course I can't ask him to pay for the full job for the price I'm getting.
There really is no need to do that. 20 years ago that was the "done thing" and hundreds of boats went through the treatment, mainly because a boat became unsalable at any hint of the "O" word - and boats were worth comparatively more money. That is not the case now. 40 year old boats are almost worthless now - selling typically for less than 10% of their replacement cost. Almost nobody does strip and replace gel coat now - not least because it almost always fails in a few years.
Follow the good advice given by many experienced people here - just patch as you go along. Patching will have no effect on the value or potential life of the boat nor alter the enjoyment you get from it. Concentrate on the things that are important for the safety and usability of the boat.
