Interior Sadler 29 terrible paint job?

Stringers

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I'v recently bought a Sadler 29 which has had a terrible paint job throughout the interior - it's now flaking off. Any tips on what to do? My 2 options seem to be - 1, attempt to strip it all - the roof is textured finish so will take ages.. or 2. Epoxy prime and reapint with a decent 2 part poly paint.. or a mix of both. Everytimne I go onboard it's making me twitch. And it's a bloody mould magnet.
 
It’s probably the answer you don’t want…. But get sanding!

Maybe buy a good quality sander with a vacuum connection and decent dust extraction. Oh and lots of sanding discs.
 
My memory of the Sadler 29 we once had was that the woodwork never looked as if it would ever need painting. The double skin hull was much better insulated than other boats of the time and mould was not a problem.
 
I would sand off the loose and get it back to well adhered .... then Van Lining ...

Its far better than the old Vinyl foam backed stuff ... it is nice to touch ... it aids insulation ... wet rag wipe to clean ... and a doddle to apply. I like panels - but its a lot of work to get it right.
Van lining is dead easy and not expensive.

I bought a 20m roll and it came with the recc'd number of correct high temp spray adhesive. eBay is full of it ... so not hard to get ..
 
I would sand off the loose and get it back to well adhered .... then Van Lining ...

Its far better than the old Vinyl foam backed stuff ... it is nice to touch ... it aids insulation ... wet rag wipe to clean ... and a doddle to apply. I like panels - but its a lot of work to get it right.
Van lining is dead easy and not expensive.

I bought a 20m roll and it came with the recc'd number of correct high temp spray adhesive. eBay is full of it ... so not hard to get ..
On the back of your (at least I think it was you) recommendation I’ve just bought 4way stretch fabric to make good after some grp work in the forepeak. I was planning on applying it to new paneling. Did you spray and stick direct to grp?
 
On the back of your (at least I think it was you) recommendation I’ve just bought 4way stretch fabric to make good after some grp work in the forepeak. I was planning on applying it to new paneling. Did you spray and stick direct to grp?

Yep - nothing between the lining and GRP - other than the old crap I could not remove. I expected to have luimps and bumps in the finished - but no - it all came out nice. You'd never know its not fully sanded back ...

I was lucky that the old vinyl provided templates for me ... but its not difficult without.

I'd upload pictures - but I use IMGUR which forum being UK based - means they wont show ... lets see if I can sort another way ... ( just downloaded and sorted ...)

Stripping the old vinyl :

stripping old vinyl.jpg

stripping old vinyl 2.jpg

stripping old vinyl 3.jpg

I scraped the loose and then sanded to reduce the edges of adhering crap ... then attached lining ...

lining 1.jpg

This next shows me working round the 'window' which then had lining under the alloy frame ..

lining 2.jpg

I made small mistake on the stbd side with the joint ... I could have sorted - but decided to leave it in the end ... the camera makes it look far worse by highlighting it ... in reality - you don't really see it ..

lining 3.jpg

That's the forecabin ... I still have main cabin and heads area to do as all was put back when I hit rocks and had to have keel repaired. Plan is to complete this summer.
 
I had a similar problem to Stringers' with a badly painted interior. There is no sensible way to paint over flaking paint. On the woodwork, I found that a carbide scraper did much better than sanding and it wasn't that bad a job really. I would expect same on smooth GRP. But if the roof scenario described is a textured-gelcoat fibreglass liner, I think that's a different, tricky situation and I am not sure what to suggest. You'd basically have to sand it flat which sounds not so good. The 4-way stretch is good on the bare glass you get behind the old headlining cloth for tricky shapes like V-berths, but I'm a bit doubtful on flaking paint on textured gel...
 
Yep - nothing between the lining and GRP - other than the old crap I could not remove. I expected to have luimps and bumps in the finished - but no - it all came out nice. You'd never know its not fully sanded back ...

I was lucky that the old vinyl provided templates for me ... but its not difficult without.

I'd upload pictures - but I use IMGUR which forum being UK based - means they wont show ... lets see if I can sort another way ... ( just downloaded and sorted ...)

Stripping the old vinyl :

View attachment 204352

View attachment 204353

View attachment 204354

I scraped the loose and then sanded to reduce the edges of adhering crap ... then attached lining ...

View attachment 204355

This next shows me working round the 'window' which then had lining under the alloy frame ..

View attachment 204356

I made small mistake on the stbd side with the joint ... I could have sorted - but decided to leave it in the end ... the camera makes it look far worse by highlighting it ... in reality - you don't really see it ..

View attachment 204357

That's the forecabin ... I still have main cabin and heads area to do as all was put back when I hit rocks and had to have keel repaired. Plan is to complete this summer.
Nice work, well done. Finally did you spray the adhesive onto grp or the cloth? And will I appreciate psychedelic music, incense sticks and tie-dyed clothing whilst doing the job?
 
TBH - its a while since I did the job ... but primarily I sprayed the lining ... but seem to remember that I did spray onto GRP in places I felt needed some help - but I don't think it was necessary. The adhesive gives you a 'reposition' time if you get it wrong on initial placement ... but as with most contact adhesives - that time is limited.

I made sure I had good ventilation as the adhesive solvent is quite noticeable. But I did not have any special clothing ..... note that if you do get adhesive on to clothes - its a b****r to remove ... so not advised to wear sunday best !
 
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