erikgreen
Captain
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2007
- Messages
- 3,105
I'm going to start a new thread soon (two boat threads running at once, a sure sign of MBS) for my new "project" which is a 1961-ish Buehler Turbocraft jet boat.
It's a super pretty, probably very fun, historically important boat (first production jet boat, same model owned by Jackie Kennedy, magazine articles written about it, etc).
So I'm pretty sure I'd be able to sell it for a bit if I restored it, plus the restore would be fun (simple drivetrain sooo much easier than I/O mechanicals). But the parts are worth a bit themselves... classic engine, etc. Plus I could spend next winter restoring a classic car instead, which I need (all I have to drive at the moment is my tow pickup, which isn't getting me a lot of dates
Before I make that decision, I need to ask the collective wisdom here about fixing the gelcoat. Due to the desire to restore the boat to original condition, I don't want to paint the hull, I want to match and restore the original gelcoat color.
The problem with this is that the boat is old, and while the gelcoat is in generally good shape (no delaminations, blisters, major sections missing) it has a lot of spider cracks all over the hull, possibly due to flexing after the stringers/structure rotted. It has a few small locations missing due to impacts of branches, etc in storage on the cap, too.
What I'm thinking I'd want to do is remove any major sections of spidered gelcoat, (where the cracks go down to the glass) and sand other spidered areas, plus clean up the hull in general to remove any loose gelcoat. I'd repair the underlying glass as needed. At some point in parallel with this I'd repair the interior structure of the boat, probably creating or needing to repair some more gelcoat holes in the process.
Then I would plan on buying some good quality gelcoat and hand color matching the hull's polished color (I'd have to polish a section) and using arbourite or plastic molds and to mold the replacement coat in place, then fair and polish that. Then I'd re-attach the hardware and hopefully have a nice, shiny boat.
Since I've never done significant work with gelcoat, I need some idea how well this would work - I know it's not easy to make the patched hull shiny and fair, or match the color of 50 year old faded gelcoat, but if I did this:
* Do I need to go down to the glass everywhere, or will gelcoat stick to sanded gelcoat enough?
* Will new gelcoat stick to the underlying glass well enough to last a while?
* Can anyone predict any gotchas of doing this?
* I'm operating on the assumption that a "restored" boat should be the original color without paint. Or would it be ok to give it a quality paint job instead?
* Or should I try to find a gelcoat patch compound made with epoxy instead?
Any thoughts appreciated,
Erik
It's a super pretty, probably very fun, historically important boat (first production jet boat, same model owned by Jackie Kennedy, magazine articles written about it, etc).
So I'm pretty sure I'd be able to sell it for a bit if I restored it, plus the restore would be fun (simple drivetrain sooo much easier than I/O mechanicals). But the parts are worth a bit themselves... classic engine, etc. Plus I could spend next winter restoring a classic car instead, which I need (all I have to drive at the moment is my tow pickup, which isn't getting me a lot of dates
Before I make that decision, I need to ask the collective wisdom here about fixing the gelcoat. Due to the desire to restore the boat to original condition, I don't want to paint the hull, I want to match and restore the original gelcoat color.
The problem with this is that the boat is old, and while the gelcoat is in generally good shape (no delaminations, blisters, major sections missing) it has a lot of spider cracks all over the hull, possibly due to flexing after the stringers/structure rotted. It has a few small locations missing due to impacts of branches, etc in storage on the cap, too.
What I'm thinking I'd want to do is remove any major sections of spidered gelcoat, (where the cracks go down to the glass) and sand other spidered areas, plus clean up the hull in general to remove any loose gelcoat. I'd repair the underlying glass as needed. At some point in parallel with this I'd repair the interior structure of the boat, probably creating or needing to repair some more gelcoat holes in the process.
Then I would plan on buying some good quality gelcoat and hand color matching the hull's polished color (I'd have to polish a section) and using arbourite or plastic molds and to mold the replacement coat in place, then fair and polish that. Then I'd re-attach the hardware and hopefully have a nice, shiny boat.
Since I've never done significant work with gelcoat, I need some idea how well this would work - I know it's not easy to make the patched hull shiny and fair, or match the color of 50 year old faded gelcoat, but if I did this:
* Do I need to go down to the glass everywhere, or will gelcoat stick to sanded gelcoat enough?
* Will new gelcoat stick to the underlying glass well enough to last a while?
* Can anyone predict any gotchas of doing this?
* I'm operating on the assumption that a "restored" boat should be the original color without paint. Or would it be ok to give it a quality paint job instead?
* Or should I try to find a gelcoat patch compound made with epoxy instead?
Any thoughts appreciated,
Erik