The whole process was dogged by unusual weather in the form
of heat wave temperatures, strong winds or threats of rain but I finally
achieved two coats of Pre-Kote and two top coats of TopLac – a one pot emulsion
produced by International Paints.
Now I don’t believe that having managed to paint the cockpit
makes me any kind of expert but for the sake of anyone else considering
embarking on this task, here is a brief summary of what I learned (mainly
through the mistakes I made).
A professional will spend 80% of his effort on preparation
of the GRP surface. As an amateur you should devote 90% on this task and that
will probably take you 95% of the time. No amount of paint will cover or hide
sloppy preparation. Preparation includes:
cleaning the surface to be
painted;
washing with a degreaser and/or
acetone to remove any possible traces of silicone;
removing as many fittings as you
can so that you can paint underneath to avoid having too many ‘edges’;
filling holes, dings, cracks;
sanding, to smooth filling and
other imperfections, to remove stains and to provide a key for the paint;
(Start with 80 grade sandpaper and finish with 120 grade or even finer) *NOTE the lower the number the courser the paper
removing all traces of sanding
dust and moisture;
masking off the edges.
Paint should be applied in thin coats. Some people prefer a
brush, others like rollers. I tried both and finally settled on a cheap foam
pad. Cheap disposable brushes are fine so long as they don’t shed hairs. Some
people comb their brushes with a hair-comb and they swear it is a very
effective method for dislodging loose hairs which might stick to the paintwork.
Roller users should use small foam or very short haired rollers to avoid
‘orange peel effects’. A dry brush in you other had can be very effective in
removing drips, runs, brush or roller marks before the paint sets. Paint should
be applied in a union flag manner to help avoid obvious unidirectional brush
marks on the finished job.
Do not underestimate weather effects. If the weather is too
hot, the paint will dry as you paint and the effects will be awful, too windy
and you get dust and if there is a hint of rain – do something else. Even on a
perfect day, you will find that the paint behaves differently on different
parts of the boat. So in areas where the GRP is in direct sunlight the paint
will be quicker to set and less forgiving than in cooler shadier areas. Take a
garden watering can with you and damp down the area around the boat to minimise
dust.
I actually made a poorer job in areas where I was too
careful, applying paint in minute quantities and brushing out too often for too
long. As it sets it can drag and when this starts to happen it is best left
alone. The areas where I was more confident were done much quicker and they
produced the best effect. Keep checking back, especially corners and hard edges
drips can be brushed out if you spot them soon enough. Apply the paint thinly,
several carefully applied thin coats are better than one coat applied too
thickly.
The good news is that if a coat goes wrong, you can always
sand back to a smooth surface and apply a new coat – providing of course that
you remove the dust after sanding. I had to do this with my second undercoat
using 240 grade sandpaper – no harm was done.
I now have a problem however, - Finding the ideal weather
conditions to get the four coats on took as many weeks and the masking tape is now
probably welded to the gel coat. Ah well, that’s a problem for next week.
Onwards and upwards!
Seaward
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