'67 Holiday 18' - Make it Usable

Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
I tried and tried mixing different colors of Rust-Oleum to match my existing paint and could never get there.
Went to Sherwin-Williams and had them mix up their All Surface Oil-Based Exterior Enamel to match.
It came out real nice.
 

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Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
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Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
I haven't gotten around to trying the color anywhere on the boat, but here's a couple more examples of how well it matches in different lightings.
It picks up the different hues.
 

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Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
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Mar 5, 2020
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207
Someone posted somewhere that my tires look too small for my boat and trailer.
Here is their rating and size:
 

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Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
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Mar 5, 2020
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207
The guy said the tires were rather new.
You say they are 23 years old?
 

Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
I was thinking of putting a fresh coat of new gelcoat, but then started thinking if there are issues with the floor below, it would be a waste of energy and materials to cover a surface that needs work.
I'm leaning towards just patching the bad areas and putting a non-slip paint over it.
The plywood looks good, but the gelcoat is getting old.
Thoughts?
See pics
 

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SHSU

Lieutenant Junior+Starmada Splash Of The Year 2019
Joined
Mar 8, 2017
Messages
1,668
Is that the flooring? I don't think they used gelcoat, but could be wrong. Most of us replace the floor since we are doing all the other work anyways. Plenty of guys have used some form of non slip on their decks to seal/cover.

SHSU
 

Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
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Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
I really think someone did a restore on this boat some years ago and put a new wood deck and then covered it with gelcoat.
The seats and side panels were reupholster some years back.
I pulled some more of the gelcoat back, and the wood floor is in great condition..
 

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Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
I know some will say, 'why go to all this work, just do it right the first time'. -
I get that, that's why I was originally going to put new gelcoat over the old with all the appropriate prep-work.
But the existing gelcoat was cracking, and in the pic above you can see water stains on the plywood where the gelcoat was cracking.
I want to use the boat this year.
So paint it will be for now. And I may be pleasantly surprised for how it holds up.
I painted my metal truck bed with Rust-Oleum Professional Black Oil-Based, no primer, no prep and I've hauled all kings of stuff around. A trip to the metal scrap recycling, dumps, loads of dirt, bark dust, firewood. And 12 years later it's still holding up.
I'll see if I can find some before, after and present pics, but it was rough and ugly. I just pressure washed it rolled it right out of the can.
.
We'll see how it goes, but Rust-Oleum Oil-Based Enamel is tough paint.

Besides, I think 'doing it right' is relative. It's an old 18 foot aluminum StarCraft that I got delivered for $900 - with a still great running 75hp Suzuki.
 

Berdink

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 5, 2020
Messages
207
Besides, in a few years I may decide to pull up the plywood and replace the foam. But for now things look good and just the gelcoat finish that was put on the plywood deck is failing. Rust-Oleum for now.
 

1985 Century Mustang

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 9, 2023
Messages
304
I know some will say, 'why go to all this work, just do it right the first time'. -
I get that, that's why I was originally going to put new gelcoat over the old with all the appropriate prep-work.
But the existing gelcoat was cracking, and in the pic above you can see water stains on the plywood where the gelcoat was cracking.
I want to use the boat this year.
So paint it will be for now. And I may be pleasantly surprised for how it holds up.
I painted my metal truck bed with Rust-Oleum Professional Black Oil-Based, no primer, no prep and I've hauled all kings of stuff around. A trip to the metal scrap recycling, dumps, loads of dirt, bark dust, firewood. And 12 years later it's still holding up.
I'll see if I can find some before, after and present pics, but it was rough and ugly. I just pressure washed it rolled it right out of the can.
.
We'll see how it goes, but Rust-Oleum Oil-Based Enamel is tough paint.

Besides, I think 'doing it right' is relative. It's an old 18 foot aluminum StarCraft that I got delivered for $900 - with a still great running 75hp Suzuki.

I'm going with the Rust-Oleum Topside paint on my boat top only. Further, I used regular Grey Rust-Oleum paint on my boat trailer and it held up really nice. I used two coats on the trailer.

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