Monday, May 26, 2014

Complete Rough Sanding ... Check!

Another 1:20 hours today and all, we'll almost all, the gel coat is off. Asked Phil to move the stands and blocking so we can get the surfaces under them too. Still need to clean up around thruhulls too.

Dark and oozing blisters are very easy to spot on the sanded fiberglass hull. It's a simple matter to dig out the blister with the 24 grit paper we're using to sand the bottom.

As evidenced by the pictures below it seems seawater is penetrating voids in the shoe and working its way to the iorn ballast.
About a week after sanding the show, rust colored water stains it.

An hour after sanding the stain off, drops of clear water appear.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Grinding, grinding, grinding...

Another two hours grinding on the bottom.  Looks like just one more day grinding and we'll be on to the 'fill and fair' stage.

Bicki Feeling her oats ;-)

Monday, May 12, 2014

Starboard Side Completely Sanded? Check!

There's some progress to report.  After 2:20 grinding on the hull today we finished the rough sanding on the starboard side.  Yahoo!  

Clean starboard side bottom!


It feels good to make progress.
With the end of grinding in sight it's time to start nailing down the products and processes we'll use to barrier coat the bottom  Here's a page doing just that...

A sample piece of the gel coat off the bottom mic's in at .027"

Sunday, May 11, 2014

The Grind Continues


Hours on end of grinding gives one plenty of time to consider the layers, one, by one, by one as the angle grinder slowly cuts through them.  The picture below shows: black bottom paint; red bottom paint; white gel coat; the gray is an epoxy barrier coat put on at the yard; and finally the raw fiberglass which is tan.  If all the bottom was as well stuck together as the layers in this picture, grinding would be unnecessary. But...



...as the picture below vividly shows, all the layers aren't sticking together.  In fact, in this picture there's a noticeable gap between the fiberglass and the layers above it.   Interestingly, it isn't the gel coat that's peeling, it's the epoxy barrier coat beneath it!  Perhaps during hull layup the yard let the epoxy set too long before applying the glass over the barrier coat.  Whatever was done wrong, it wasn't totally wrong--because at least half the gel coat is well bonded.



No explanation needed for the picture below, except to say this was taken after only 1:20 of grinding.


Saturday, May 10, 2014

Another Day on the Bottom

Some people go to gyms...

We lasted 1:40 grinding on the bottom today.  For the first time we covered ourselves in corn starch, the idea being that it fills the pours so the fiberglass can't.  It really does work.

Corn startch to the resuce!

We're both less itchy after showering.  The 16 grit paper cut right through the bottom paint, gel coat and barrier coat, but it's so coarse it misses as much as it takes off.

We've both gotten good at recognizing blisters in the fiberglass: they're usually a little darker than the surrounding glass; the fibers in the glass are more pronounced--as though the resin had been washed away; and some ooze liquid after being disturbed.  The fix is simple enough, run the edge of the sand paper across the entire blister until the glass is the same color and consistency as the surrounding glass.  None of the blisters have been over 1/8" deep and most are 1/16" or less.  At least 2/3 of the starboard side and 1/2 of the port side is now done.