Polyester boats?

Agree about the first bit, not about the second. Poly-cotton is also good in 35-65. None of the problems of pilling that one gets with straight polyester.
 
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Have been looking at a Starrat 45 built in polyester... as a hull material what are the upsides and downsides over more conventional make-ups?
Cheers
Steve

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G'day Steve,

Poly ester resin is a standard resin most fibreglass boats afloat today are polyester resin.

Upsides: low maintenance, strong and light.

Downsides: Osmosis.

Avagoodweekend......
 
True, but early GRP boats used gelcoat resins that were more permeable than recent ones, so there is less chance of getting osmosis in a reasonably recent boat, by which I mean no more than 10 to 15 years old, or whenever the manufacturer adopted the newer resins. Another factor is whether the boat had an epoxy hull treatment from new.
 
Generally older GRP boats used orthophthalic resin whilst more recent boats use isothalic resin.

My GRP boat is coming up to 40yrs old and is still absolutly fine although I would be more conserned if I was leaving her in the water year round.

Regards Nick
 
40 years proves that even the older resins were perfectly OK if properly and evenly mixed with the right proportion of hardener. I suspect much osmosis is down to poor mixing and unsatisfactory layup practices, rather than the actual resin used.
 
Shown it here before, but proud anyway:
Oldpicturesuploadfile399.jpg


V nearly 50 years old now. The hull is repainted, but no trace of Osmosis, and still going strong. Polyester through and through (all 2 inches of it!).
 
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