Thank you for your response Scott we posted same time lol
I took my 19 ft Starcraft to our county recycling center & it cost me like $20 for them to take it. Had to remove the gas tank & I had it stripped down, removing the drive, the engine, seats etc. so it didn't weigh much.I found a boat exactly like mine for free with many great parts but rotted like mine was, my question is can anyone give me any examples of what it might cost to get rid of just the hull. 16' Bayliner capri.
I finally reached out to the local transfer station and it would cost somewhere around 500 which tells me they don't want them and that was totally gutted.I took my 19 ft Starcraft to our county recycling center & it cost me like $20 for them to take it. Had to remove the gas tank & I had it stripped down, removing the drive, the engine, seats etc. so it didn't weigh much.
Sorry, I didn't get notified for this...@Mad Props
I just happened to run across some of your restoration videos and wanted to ask how the paint is holding up and do you have any regrets using paint over gelcoat.
The paint definitely seems easier to manipulate.
Sorry, I didn't get notified for this...
I'm really happy with how the paint went... My only complaint at this point (which is my own fault), this winter my cover got a rip in it, so water sat in one of the corners of the deck for a long time... Eventually I think it soaked through the paint itself and got under it... When I took the cover off this spring to clean up, I found several blisters where this happened... I "popped" them and gnarly looking water squirted out... The paint itself didn't come off, but its basically lost its adhesion to the underside... Granted, they are all really small, like less than 1/8" at the biggest...
If they start flaking off, or just drive me nuts, it would be an easy fix...
Thats the biggest benefit I see of paint, you can always order more in the exact same shade and fix bad spots as needed... Gelcoat you will need to custom tint to match everytime unless you just use the plain bright white.
I would say, if I decided to do it again, I might go the 2 part poly instead... More money upfront, but you don't need to sand between coats, and overall more durable/harder...
If you have a PPG dealer close by, I would recommend Sigmadur 550... its basically the same as most 2 part poly boat paints, but a good bi
That's ok.Sorry, I didn't get notified for this...
I'm really happy with how the paint went... My only complaint at this point (which is my own fault), this winter my cover got a rip in it, so water sat in one of the corners of the deck for a long time... Eventually I think it soaked through the paint itself and got under it... When I took the cover off this spring to clean up, I found several blisters where this happened... I "popped" them and gnarly looking water squirted out... The paint itself didn't come off, but its basically lost its adhesion to the underside... Granted, they are all really small, like less than 1/8" at the biggest...
If they start flaking off, or just drive me nuts, it would be an easy fix...
Thats the biggest benefit I see of paint, you can always order more in the exact same shade and fix bad spots as needed... Gelcoat you will need to custom tint to match everytime unless you just use the plain bright white.
I would say, if I decided to do it again, I might go the 2 part poly instead... More money upfront, but you don't need to sand between coats, and overall more durable/harder...
If you have a PPG dealer close by, I would recommend Sigmadur 550... its basically the same as most 2 part poly boat paints, but a good bit cheaper.