Matching gelcoat colour

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
My ‘new to me’ Skanner 19 has a nasty little dig out of the gelcoat, only about 2cm wide but fairly deep. I have epoxy resin and filler to hand but am stuck with the colour. The hull dark green gelcoat. How do people match the colour? I presume I buy some green dye and mix it in, but a, I have no idea where to buy it and b no idea how to achieve a reasonable colour match.

Any suggestions as to suppliers and pointers on how to do it would be much appreciated

thanks in advance

Steve
 

AngusMcDoon

Well-known member
Joined
20 Oct 2004
Messages
8,867
Location
Up some Hebridean loch
Visit site
This lot have everything you need and will answer questions if you call them...

ECF - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

Pigments here...

Pigments - Polyester, Epoxy, Polyurethane

Pre-pigmented flowcoats here which are easier to use...

Buy Polyester Flowcoat - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

You can't easily put polyester gelcoat on top of epoxy anything, or use a polyester compatible pigment in an epoxy gelcoat. There are many more polyester compatible pigments than epoxy ones, so best to use polyester for everything.

If the surface you are doing the filling on is not horizontal then the gel/flowcoat will slump after you apply it before it cures. You need to cover it with something that it won't adhere to. You can use standard kitchen foil if you are careful to keep it absolutely crinkle free, or you can use this stuff...

Buy Polyester release films - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

You also need acetone to clean and degrease the area. You can get it from ECF but it's cheaper for a small amount on ebay.

You will need different grit sandpaper up to 1200 grit, cork sanding block, and if you want to get it shiny then a polishing compound like this...

Farecla Profile Select liquid compound

Before you fill the damage you will need a Dremel with a round grinding bit to grind out the area to be filled and chamfer the edges...

10pcs Ceramic Stone Polishing Grinding Dremel Rotary Die Grinder Drill Bit Tool | eBay
 
Last edited:

ghostlymoron

Well-known member
Joined
9 Apr 2005
Messages
9,889
Location
Shropshire
Visit site
I would think for a blemish of that size, gelcoat filler is the stuff. Colour matching is a black art so you'll need a whole pallette of colours to get an exact match. The technique is to add small amounts of pigment to un catalysed filler until the colour is a match then add catalyst and fill.
In practice it's not easy and the only way to get an exact match is to get it done professionally.
 

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
This lot have everything you need and will answer questions if you call them...

ECF - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

Pigments here...

Pigments - Polyester, Epoxy, Polyurethane

Pre-pigmented flowcoats here which are easier to use...

Buy Polyester Flowcoat - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

You can't easily put polyester gelcoat on top of epoxy anything, or use a polyester compatible pigment in an epoxy gelcoat. There are many more polyester compatible pigments than epoxy ones, so best to use polyester for everything.

If the surface you are doing the filling on is not horizontal then the gel/flowcoat will slump after you apply it before it cures. You need to cover it with something that it won't adhere to. You can use standard kitchen foil if you are careful to keep it absolutely crinkle free, or you can use this stuff...

Buy Polyester release films - East Coast Fibreglass Supplies

You also need acetone to clean and degrease the area. You can get it from ECF but it's cheaper for a small amount on ebay.

You will need different grit sandpaper up to 1200 grit, cork sanding block, and if you want to get it shiny then a polishing compound like this...

Farecla Profile Select liquid compound

Before you fill the damage you will need a Dremel with a round grinding bit to grind out the area to be filled and chamfer the edges...

10pcs Ceramic Stone Polishing Grinding Dremel Rotary Die Grinder Drill Bit Tool | eBay
Thank you. What a comprehensive answer. Very much appreciated
 

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
I would think for a blemish of that size, gelcoat filler is the stuff. Colour matching is a black art so you'll need a whole pallette of colours to get an exact match. The technique is to add small amounts of pigment to un catalysed filler until the colour is a match then add catalyst and fill.
In practice it's not easy and the only way to get an exact match is to get it done professionally.
. Thank you. Might get the missus to do the mixing!
 

BobnLesley

Well-known member
Joined
1 Dec 2005
Messages
3,880
Location
Aground in Yorkshire awaiting a very high tide
Visit site
I discovered - accidentally - that the perfect match for our Albin Vega was to add two drips of yellow dye, one of black and about a half-inch of cigarette ash; during a short period I was off the fags, I completed one repair using ash scrounged from a passing and somewhat bemused Italian.
 

eilerts

Active member
Joined
26 Apr 2016
Messages
141
Location
Trondheim, Norway
Visit site
I looked at some green scanner 19 on the net.
There is a product called "MagicEzy 9 second chip fix". They have a colour they call "forrest green", that at least on my screen look close. Check it out.
If the green does not match, I guess you get closer by adding black - if you can mix it and apply it in 9 sec, I presume.
The colour on the Skanner looks similar to the one used on Fischer motorsailers. I repaired one last year. Started with green Ral 6001 and added quite a lot of black and some less of dark blue. I was surprised how much black I needed to add.
 

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
I looked at some green scanner 19 on the net.
There is a product called "MagicEzy 9 second chip fix". They have a colour they call "forrest green", that at least on my screen look close. Check it out.
If the green does not match, I guess you get closer by adding black - if you can mix it and apply it in 9 sec, I presume.
The colour on the Skanner looks similar to the one used on Fischer motorsailers. I repaired one last year. Started with green Ral 6001 and added quite a lot of black and some less of dark blue. I was surprised how much black I needed to add.
Brilliant. Thank you
 

tross

Active member
Joined
19 Aug 2003
Messages
674
Location
Lymington
Visit site
Find some Pantel clour charts and match your hull colour ( polish it back a bit ) and ask one of the gelcoat suppliers to supply to that spec - easier than guessing.
 

AntarcticPilot

Well-known member
Joined
4 May 2007
Messages
10,809
Location
Cambridge, UK
www.cooperandyau.co.uk
Thank you. Good idea. I’m sure it’s a standard colour.
It probably WAS a standard colour when new. It will have faded, and done so differentially from place to place on the boat.

A word of warning - never try and match from a photograph on a screen. EVen if you have professional colour matching equipment, the relationship between the screen's emissive colour gamut and pigment's reflective colour gamut won't be very close. It's very much a black art - I had to do it for professional reasons, and even with high quality monitors and printers, it was never particularly good - good enough to see how it would turn out, but not exact.
 

Praxinoscope

Well-known member
Joined
12 Mar 2018
Messages
5,789
Location
Aberaeron
Visit site
I managed to create a perfect colour match by gradually mixing two GRP pigments (light blue and white )in a small container until they matched the colour of the hull, then added this to topcoat to effect the repair.
I have kept the remaining unused mixed pigment in case it’s needed again.
Have attached before and after pics.
Muntjak scratches.jpg Muntjak repair .jpg
 

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
I managed to create a perfect colour match by gradually mixing two GRP pigments (light blue and white )in a small container until they matched the colour of the hull, then added this to topcoat to effect the repair.
I have kept the remaining unused mixed pigment in case it’s needed again.
Have attached before and after pics.
View attachment 139344 View attachment 139345

Thank you. Give me hope at least. Or just paint the topsides black!:)
 

john_morris_uk

Well-known member
Joined
3 Jul 2002
Messages
28,235
Location
At sea somewhere.
yachtserendipity.wordpress.com
Find some Pantel clour charts and match your hull colour ( polish it back a bit ) and ask one of the gelcoat suppliers to supply to that spec - easier than guessing.
That’s what I did when colour matching the gel coat on our daughters Pandora.

Find someone to borrow the colour swatches off as they are hugely expensive to buy for a one-off job. I found one of the colour cards matched perfectly and east coast supplies had that very gelcoat in stock.
 

Daverw

Well-known member
Joined
2 Nov 2016
Messages
2,978
Location
Humber
Visit site
The really anouying things is that I’ve cut various holes in the gel coat over the last few years but I’ve never though about keeping the cut out bit to help getting a match in the future, would make is so easy
 

Restoration man

Active member
Joined
3 Jun 2012
Messages
367
Visit site
Look on eBay for a ral colour chart find what’s the closest match and goto east coast fiberglass and order some gelcote of the closest colour match you can get “well technically you need flowcoat or add wax to gelcote “ I think they also sell pre thickened gelcote that would be lot easier to use for a first time repair ,
 

GrandadPig

Active member
Joined
19 Mar 2022
Messages
132
Visit site
Look on eBay for a ral colour chart find what’s the closest match and goto east coast fiberglass and order some gelcote of the closest colour match you can get “well technically you need flowcoat or add wax to gelcote “ I think they also sell pre thickened gelcote that would be lot easier to use for a first time repair ,
Thank you. I will do as you suggest.
 
Top