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#1
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I don't believe the paint sits below the water line. Even on the bow it is peeling quite a ways up. Looks like it's being "washed" away while underway. My biggest concern is where the bottom paint and topside paint will meet. Seems a very vulnerable area.
Spare that's a sweet looking hull. Maybe I'll just tow it down to you and have you paint it haha. I've never painted a boat but done plenty of cars and have had much success so I'm thinking I can pull it off.
__________________
Current boat(s): 1985 V-20 Cuddy/ 470 IB/OB 1972 Egg Harbor 38’ Sedan/ 454 Crusaders |
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#2
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its a parasail boat that was built using the old Rybo Runner/Man o War Hull. Notice the huge step. Its 31 ft long. I just painted the newer version last week(they have 2 para boats). The newer one doesn't have the step
http://www.cwsboats.com/oceanpro31.htm |
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#3
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The awlcraft 2000 is awesome paint!!!!!! When you start your prep work you will see what was done. That will determine what you have to do for the proper results.
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#4
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We went with the Awlcraft 2000 solely for its ability to be touched up. These boats are commercial operated boats, and they get scratched up pretty good. A2000 is nowhere near as hard(and scratch resistant) of a paint as the regular Awlcraft. Its comparable to catalyzed premium automotive paint. In hind site, we are having to repaint that boat again this year because it has so many scratches, it faster to redcoat the whole boat rather than just repair. We should have painted it with regular Awlcraft. One thing we did is I re-coated within 24 hours over the primer, so we didn't have to sand the primer before topcoat. It was not my call and I was a bit nervous about it. but the paint stuck pretty good. I would have sanded the 545 before topcoat, but I wasn't paying the prep guys, the boat owners were. Awlgrip primers are the real deal, they are nothing like automotive primers and most automotive painters are lost with them. 545 sands like concrete, and the filling primer doesn't sand anywhere near as easy as automotive primers. Auto primers use a lot of talc and filler to make it easy to sand. This stuff absorbs moisture and causes problems down the road in marine applications. I would rather spray auto paint over marine primers than marine topcoat over auto primers(still better to stay with recommended marine paints)I really want to spray some Alex seal. Its a much improved paint over Awlcraft, offering more colors, effects, and its able to be spotted. There's another paint company that's making a comparable paint, but I cant remember the name( its made here in SC). Regardless, its expensive. That parasail boat used 1 full gallon on 545(with activator 1 gal) and 1 gallon of top coat( 1/2 gallon of activator), has a gallon of thinner. All added up it was close to $800 in materials
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#5
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Anyone got an estimate on how much paint painting just the hillsides will take. Probably do 3 coats minimum. The paint I'm looking at is $280/gal. I'd like to keep it under a gallon haha.
__________________
Current boat(s): 1985 V-20 Cuddy/ 470 IB/OB 1972 Egg Harbor 38’ Sedan/ 454 Crusaders |
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#6
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I painted that boat with a full gallon, and layed it one heavy, 2 qts should be enough for a v, maybe even 1 qt
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#7
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S little over one quart painted my boat....one tack coat then one heavy "flow" or finish coat. Its beautiful!
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