Thoughts on Aquagard paint

JoshOnt

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Aug 12, 2013
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I am sure with this boat you will get lucky plenty over the next 6 years :D
Boat will but paint maybe not, if it lasted 6 I would be happy if i only used one coat. Most people on here are thinking long term and doing it the best way not thinking about the fact that a student is trying to do it. Seems to be a common thing on here that people just go with well just do it and rarely take into consideration cost of doing something.
 

TruckDrivingFool

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I'm with ondarvr, if you don't care about the looks why even bother painting? Put the labor and money towords other parts of the boat.
 

JoshOnt

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I'm with ondarvr, if you don't care about the looks why even bother painting? Put the labor and money towords other parts of the boat.
I am worried that it may cause damage to the fiberglass as I have no idea how deep into the gelcoat(?) it is.
 

alldodge

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Barrier coat is used to keep water from penetrating thru the gelcoat. If water makes its way thru it gets into the wood and causes blisters and rot. Bottom paint is not made to stop water penetration, barrier coat is. Appears you only have bottom paint on the boat. If the manufacture did a real good job of applying the gelcoat it takes much longer for water to penetrate.

Edit: getting to threads mixed up sorry
 
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JoshOnt

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Barrier coat is used to keep water from penetrating thru the gelcoat. If water makes its way thru it gets into the wood and causes blisters and rot. Bottom paint is not made to stop water penetration, barrier coat is. Appears you only have bottom paint on the boat. If the manufacture did a real good job of applying the gelcoat it takes much longer for water to penetrate.

In short, the water is/has penetrated the bottom paint. Doing the job now or next season will not change the overall job needed. Enjoy the boat now and do it later, only suggest not a real long time later
I will either do it now or in 6-8 years. Have a look at the image linked and say weather it needs to be done or not.

http://i.imgur.com/ZdBYqFw.jpg
 

JoshOnt

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Sorry my bad, got this one mixed up with another thread about bottom paint.

You have peeling, and if that's glass under it, and it stays in the water you can have some issues
It will be trailered, the bottom paint on it is fine, just that top part that I need to know weather it needs it.
 

ondarvr

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Apr 6, 2005
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The reason there are so many ways to do it is because there are so many types of paints and expectations for the outcome. You want perfect, it takes a lot of time and money, you just want it covered with white paint.....tuhat can be cheap and relatively easy.

I re-read most of the thread. Just sand and paint, white is the best color, it will hide most of the defects, black is the worst, so don't even think about it.

No primer.

You need thinner, the paint won't level and flow very well without it, plus it's cheaper than paint.

Practice on a small area and get the rolling and brushing technique dialed in before starting on the boat, it doesn't cost money to use good techniques, the job just turns out better.

Look around, you may find some bargain bin paint at a very low cost, or someone even getting rid of excess paint from some project. Look on craigslist for someone giving it away. Even high gloss exterior house paint will work.
 
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