Phasma2128
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2021
- Messages
- 257
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 48' COCKPIT MY-Series II (1993 - 1996)
Jim mentioned don’t peel the hull also , I don’t know why . Here in South Florida, the warm water makes blister formation worse. The only reason the blisters aren’t a structural problem is the the Hatteras hulls are fairly thick. I peeled our boat about three years ago. The quote was $ 22,000. I ended up paying about $27,000 . I took the boat to St Augustine, so the price in the Miami, Ft Lauderdale area would have probably been 2 or 3 times that . I let the hull dry for 7 months. I removed all through hulls ,The $67k figure he's quoting was probably $40k for the props and the rest was for the engine. If you've ever seen one of those 52 CPMY's out of the water they have deep reduction gears and enormous +/- 40" 5 blade high-skew props on them. Every one I've ever seen out of the water I have been astonished at the size of them.
Blisters on a hatt, who cares. They're purely cosmetic. Just ignore it until it's time to sell, then grind and epoxy them. Under no circumstances would I ever peel the entire hull over a few blisters, don't get talked into that. You will end up with a high 5-figure job for no reason.
The advice not to peel the hull came from Tom Slane, rest his soul. To be fair, in the case of my own boat, we just ground out the blisters, after drying it for months in the winter, and filled and faired them. Applied several coats of Interprotect 3000, IIRC, and then bottom paint over that. A few years later, she was in for new engines, and they soda-blasted the bottom and everything was holding up perfectly. I should also mention that my boat is out of the water from November to April, and I think that helps her stay drier.
vc17Curious what recommendations for bottom paint? Fresh water
When we were boat shopping, we had a broker from Detroit tell us that the thing that killed the boats up north the most was the below zero temps & contraction causing leaks and breaks in the seals of eveything, from windows to anything that is bedded. That was great advice! We've always stored outside until we got this boat. It's expensive, but in the fall we pull out, the boat gets a bottom wash and is put inside the heated buiulding until launch in the spring. We wave goodbye and know there is nothing else to do or worry about, no more covering the boat or winterizing, etc. You can work on the boat in the comfort of heat. What a change from the days of covering the boat in the cold wind, worrying about the cover blowing off, snow & ice buildup, etc. Definitely spoiled now, wouldn't have it any other way! I'm sure some of the other guys like Sky would completely agreeYou guys that pull your boats out for the winter are lucky. I would think blister formation is greatly reduced. I saw a 74 cockpit yacht here in Florida in the yard for a bottom job , after it was finished , the amount of bleeding from blisters was amazing. Far more blisters than you could open and fix . The owner didn’t want to deal with them . I am sure money wasn’t the reason. Heated indoor storage must be great for reducing water vapor in the hull .