Only relevant picture in this one is the 4th where you can see, from a previous repair, the part where it was ground down into the white, filled with black and brought back up to the surface...however it shrank down below the surface. Lesson learned
Only relevant picture in this one is the 4th where you can see, from a previous repair, the part where it was ground down into the white, filled with black and brought back up to the surface...however it shrank down below the surface. Lesson learned
Last edited by sailnaked6842; 03-16-2017 at 12:12 PM.
What grit are you starting with? That looks like a lot of scratches for wet sanding.....
Former owner of a 1987 Supra Saltare. Current owner of a Malibu 23LSV.
Are you using just water ? Or soap and water and changing paper frequently ? Gel coat is hard reall hard , no way your sanding through , you have started with 600 that still kinda low . I would start at 1000 with 1:1 soap / water in a spray bottle . And wetting every other stroke . Start by hand . Leave the DA alone until you find the paper pattern that's gonna bring up the shine . What polish pad are you using ?
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I can't tell for sure but it looks like somebody used that poli-glow / mop-n-glo stuff on your boat at some point.
The process for compounding that I use for hand sanding is 600 - 800 - 1000 - 2000 if I can but with the DA I'll start at 800 or 1000 depending on the surface using soapy water. The water is usually like 1:30 dish soap/water which I wet it down about every 30~45 seconds to make sure there's nothing on the pad, maybe spraying 15~20 seconds on the DA. Occasionally, if I don't like the surface, I'll compound it early to see if certain marks go away and then go on to the next grit but for finishing it's always at 2000. A lot of the pictures were taken prior to any compounding because once it's compounded the camera won't focus on the finish but I'll upload the compounding job I did on it last year. The majority of the hull looks great, but it's the white streaks that show up under scratches that get bigger when you sand them that's the issue I'm dealing with. You can see it in one of the pictures on the first page where I put some bondo on the hull to help build the surface up, before removing it and ultimately shooting new gelcoat over it a few weeks ago. New gel wasn't thick enough though so some of the white is showing again and I'll probably have to get more gelcoat and respray it which sucks. Nothing enjoyable about spraying gelcoat... 20160521_142142[1].jpg
First let me say that I have never used it on a boat or seen a boat that I was positive it was used on.
With that said when I would try to wash and compound/wax the black gelcoat on one of my boats I could never get it to buff up, it would look a little blotchy and it just had this look about it like there was a film or layer of something on it. Now I have had prior experience with dark red (nautique) gel that oxidizes badly and I could always get it looking mint so something seemed fishy to me. I did some searching around on the web and that is when I came across some posts about people putting a couple layers of mop-n-glo on their black gel coats to darken up the milky oxidized black color. That is what led me to believe this was done on my black Pirata but I cannot be sure. Either way it was a total shit show. It is possible to sand the crap off but it takes a lot of time because it really clogs up the sand paper. I cannot advise you with certainty because I am not there looking at your boat but I believe you just need to take a whole lot of time wet sanding with plenty of time on each grit. Do not rush from one grit to another. eventually you will be rewarded with a mint looking boat.
Interesting because that's been one of the biggest headaches about this boat! I've sanded my ass off trying to get the color even in areas because, like you said, it would look blotchy. You can clearly see it in some of the pictures where it's been sanded and some parts looked dull, like gelcoat that has been sanded, and the other stuff just looked too shiny and weird. I've put maybe 30 hours into the gelcoat on this boat through various repairs and on the dark grey surface they all look good (if you can find them ) but you can see that the black just never comes out well. I'll keep up with the wet sanding however I'm still trying to figure out what the big white streaks are because it's definitely getting sanded through like if you look at picture 4 at the top of the page, the big white streak above the U, if you sand it then it'll get bigger.
20170318_150508[1].jpg
Picture of the same spot, post repair, came out like crap since I didn't use any patch aid, only one coat of gel and preval sprayer -> too thick and made pin holes. Will probably end up redoing it.
I agree, I use 800,1500,2000,3000.