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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Location
    NW Suburbs........Chicago, IL
    Posts
    350

    Default I can't believe this!

    So I was reading on another forum about leaving your boat sitting in the water during the season is actually bad for your boat at that it even states in the owners manual to not dock your boat for long periods in the water. This supposedly damages the gel coat??? Seriously! Its a boat, last I checked thats what they are built for, WATER. Is this just something with newer boats, metal flake gel coat or WTF??? Also anybody that actually has this in the owners manual please share a pic.
    -cjtpilot...........1992 Supra Comp Ts6m..........351 PCM
    Big Air tower
    Radar Theory Slalom, Fulltilt wakeboard, barefoot.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Vonore, TN
    Posts
    123

    Default

    My only experience with gel coat blisters was on a 1977 correct craft that my family bought in the 80's. It had blisters on the water line when we bought it. PO had it docked on a chemically treated ski lake (a real pretty blue water color). It never affected the performance just cosmetic. We ran it until 91 when we got the comp. From 10ft you couldn't see the blisters, but after a weekend in the water made buffing and waxing not so much fun. I think this is a thing of the past but I'm no expert

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    Tacoma, Wa
    Posts
    861

    Default

    Is not a thing of the past. Fiberglass is porous and so is gelcoat. The trapped water reacts with the uncured resinsin the glass and expands causing the blisters. Google epoxy seal coats / fiberglass blistering repairs. There is a ton of info out there.
    2003 Supra Launch 22SSV
    1986 Ski Natique 2001

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Vonore, TN
    Posts
    123

    Default

    Well that just makes my day! Guess I was sharing an anecdotal experience. Funny to remember we couldn't google back then.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2013
    Posts
    645

    Default

    If you go to any marina and talk to the "big boat" owners, you will find this is common knowledge. Glass boats that sit in the water full time get pulled every season or two and have the hulls cleaned, repaired and painted to prevent it...but blistering is inevitable. Few owners leave ski boats in the water full time, so the topic rarely comes up in our circles. In fact, I have never seen a ski/wake boat left in the water more than a week or so while the lift is fixed.

  6. #6

    Default

    While this can happen, it does not happen to the majority of boats. I worked at a marina for a bunch of years and washed the bottoms of many, many boats at the end of the season. If we saw blisters on a boat newer than 10 years, it was rare. In ONE instance, a 2-year old boat developed blisters and the manufacturer actually paid for the repair. But we had lots of boats that were anywhere from 10 to 30 years old with no blisters. It seems to be a factor of how the gelcoat was applied, and whether any moisture is able to get into the fiberglass itself. Which, eventually, it does in every boat.

    Unsurprisingly, blisters were more common on the 'budget-brand' boats like Bayliner, Sunbird, Stingray, Tahoe, and on especially old boats that tend to get beaten to death, like Whalers from the 70's.

    On my lake it is common practice to leave boats in from May-October uninterrupted. This is not just ski boats, but every kind of boat, from 13' Whalers to 25' cuddies (about the biggest thing on my lake).

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2013
    Posts
    645

    Default

    His boat is a '92, so it's in the range you are talking about for being susceptible. In the southern states blistering is pretty common. Granted, any blistering while a boat is under warranty will be covered. Where are you that you can float your ski boat all summer? Here in Texas you'll get a scum line that cannot be buffed out if your boat stays in the water more than a few days.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2014
    Location
    NW Suburbs........Chicago, IL
    Posts
    350

    Default

    Oh I can't leave my current boat in since I don't have a slip. Growing up we had a cottage and dock that was in a channel off the lake and we left it in from May through Oct in northern IN. This was just mainly my question I got from the Malibu forum where they were completely freaking out about boats being only a couple years old and how bad it is for them. Guess I won't be looking at a Malibu when I upgrade. lol
    Quote Originally Posted by CJD View Post
    His boat is a '92, so it's in the range you are talking about for being susceptible. In the southern states blistering is pretty common. Granted, any blistering while a boat is under warranty will be covered. Where are you that you can float your ski boat all summer? Here in Texas you'll get a scum line that cannot be buffed out if your boat stays in the water more than a few days.
    -cjtpilot...........1992 Supra Comp Ts6m..........351 PCM
    Big Air tower
    Radar Theory Slalom, Fulltilt wakeboard, barefoot.

  9. #9

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by CJD View Post
    His boat is a '92, so it's in the range you are talking about for being susceptible. In the southern states blistering is pretty common. Granted, any blistering while a boat is under warranty will be covered. Where are you that you can float your ski boat all summer? Here in Texas you'll get a scum line that cannot be buffed out if your boat stays in the water more than a few days.
    I'm in New Hampshire, and lucky enough to have a dock where I can keep the boat. The lake I'm on has very little transient boat traffic - most of the boats are kept on the lake, there's very limited public access, and the one main public ramp / parking lot is often filled with bass fishermen at 5:30am before anyone else has a chance. Sucks if you want to spend the day on the lake with your family, the bass fishermen take it up for themselves most weekends.

    The water in our lake does stain the hull, but it comes off with a bit of 'Slimy Grimy' at the season's end. I've applied far more of that to boat bottoms than I ever care to think about. Nasty stuff, but effective. It's funny, the boats in the river come in stained far worse than the boats out on the lake. But there are some that come from protected coves where the water is more stagnant, also very stained and with lots of aquatic growth.
    Last edited by SquamInboards; 03-23-2015 at 02:29 PM.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2013
    Location
    KC, MO
    Posts
    685

    Default

    Blisters can most certainly become a problem for new boats. It's best not to leave a boat in the water full time, and if you have to, bottom paint or some other type of prep work should be done to keep this from happening. It doesn't matter how new or old the boat is, they all have the same gel coat and are susceptible to the problem. I was just reading about this on the MC forums....

    http://www.mastercraft.com/teamtalk/...ad.php?t=65868

    Here's a picture of what the "blisters" look like.

    -Mike
    2006 Supra Sunsport 20V

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