Okay, It finally happened today. I was working towards this for soooooo looonnnnnnngggggg. And now I did it. :cheer2:
I finally clear coated the hull. And there is an interesting story that goes with it....as usual.
I decided that today would be the day to clear coat the hull. So yesterday I wet sanded the entire hull with some 1200 grit wet paper. And then hosed it off well. But even though it was the perfect day yesterday as well, I wanted to be sure that all the water had evaporated off before shooting clear coat.
I got up this morning and prepped the hull for the clear coat finish. Since the only thing on the hull presently was PPG base coat Acrylic Urethane paints (graphics and all) and it wasn't sealed or anything else over it yet, it was very soft and could easily be wiped off with almost anything. But I had to wipe down the hull to remove all the pollen and bugs first. After thinking about it, I tried rubbing alcohol. It was a 91% solution and I tried that on a little area to see if the paint came off.
NO it didn't, but the pollen and bugs did. So I wiped the entire hull down using the 91% rubbing alcohol and some clean shop towels. That worked pretty good. So now all I had to do was dress up in safety gear for the spraying and mix up the clear coat with the hardener and spray away.
I mixed up the first gun full and strained it through the typical strainer and shot away. Amazing to see the hull come to such a nice gloss after so long. And I sprayed the first gun and ran out a heck of a lot quicker then I figured. I only had half the hull sprayed. So second batch mixed up and away I go again. But that too ran out and then panic set in. I was out of hardener.
I cleaned the gun, removed all the safety clothes and respirator and drove to the PPG store and bought another quart of clear and another pint of hardener. It is a simple 4:1 mix. Arrive home again, re-suited up and mixed up more. I continued spraying until the entire hull was coated, and even applied a second coat.
I really need to figure out the paint coverage better. This is the second time this has happened to me. :facepalm:
WOW, I am really liking it. But it will take a wet sanding with 2000 grit and then polish before it is ready to flip back over again. Here are a few shots of it now.
Yes is looks nice and shiny, but it also has a little haze in it now. That is where the wet sand and polish will clean that up.
Here is a little better look at it. Again wet sanding followed by pollising will bring out the true shine.
And now that the side graphics are coated, they are there to stay.
Oh yea, the transom. The engine should look great sitting on that. I hope....:noidea:
Another angle. You can see the ripple in the clear coat. That is what wet sanding and polish should take care of.
And the other side. This is actually the port side but it is flipped over.
And a shot of the basic hull. I am so glad this stage of the build is near completed now. Obviously a lot more work in this boat then it will ever in a million years be worth. However, I wanted to see what it could look like and the laborious hours are pretty much forgotten over time.
Okay until next update, you all have a wonderful day.