lenseman
Active member
- Joined
- 3 Jun 2006
- Messages
- 7,077
- Location
- South East Coast - United Kingdom
I am going to come up with a suggestion (solution), which is so far-fetched you will think I am joking!
A guy in my marina was painting his deck last summer and I casually asked him what he was going to do about making the deck 'non-slip' as he seemed to be using common gloss paint (marine) and from the midship point, the side decks rose steeply towards the bow (about 1 in 8 climb).
He said watch this . . . and he proceeded to go below and return with two or three 2kg bags of granulated SUGAR !!!
I kid you not, and proceeded to sprinkle the deck paint, while still wet, with liberal quantities of granulated sugar. I could not believe it!
I thought he was joking but when the paint was dry, he had a yacht with a very impressive non-slip deck as I did not think it would work I had to try it.
Apparently, when the deck paint is dry, you just hose off the sugar (which dissolves) living very sharp pits all in the paint which in turn forms the end result.
A guy in my marina was painting his deck last summer and I casually asked him what he was going to do about making the deck 'non-slip' as he seemed to be using common gloss paint (marine) and from the midship point, the side decks rose steeply towards the bow (about 1 in 8 climb).
He said watch this . . . and he proceeded to go below and return with two or three 2kg bags of granulated SUGAR !!!
I kid you not, and proceeded to sprinkle the deck paint, while still wet, with liberal quantities of granulated sugar. I could not believe it!
I thought he was joking but when the paint was dry, he had a yacht with a very impressive non-slip deck as I did not think it would work I had to try it.
Apparently, when the deck paint is dry, you just hose off the sugar (which dissolves) living very sharp pits all in the paint which in turn forms the end result.