ADaily3224
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2005
- Messages
- 248
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 36' SEDAN (1985 - 1987)
When my boat was pulled for the winter a few weeks ago as part of the haul out process the yard power washes the bottom. It's fresh water, no growth other than a little green slime. The young employee operating the industrial strength power washer made a mess of my bottom. Granted there was quite a bit of paint, but I had been fairing it out every year before applying a new coat in the spring. Rather than take you through the torrid details suffice to say the wrong tip was used on the washer and there are places where the paint was blown off right to the gel coat. It's a mess. The good news is the bottom is in super shape, no blisters, no damage, just multiple layers of paint. Now that you get the picture my question is, has anyone used the paint stripper specifically engineered for removal of bottom coatings? It's available at West Marine and I think sold under the Star Bright label. My second question: is there any difference between the very high priced marine grade stripper, @ $125 a gallon, compared to the garden variety Zip Strip that can be found at any paint or home improvement store? If you have had any experience with this I would like to know how it worked out. Or if there's a better way, I'd like to know that too. There's no chance of a sand blast job, and I wouldn't do it anyway, and no one around here does the preferred soda blasting treatment. So I'm thinking stripper is the only way to go. What a fun job.
Tony D
Tony D