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Denver
Marine can and has for the last 23 years repaired and re-gel coated
all types of boats . Remember HUGO? Denver Marine was able to
repair hundreds of boats and repair damage from the hurricane. We
can make your toy look new again. We specialize in restoring
Ranger Bass Boats, but we restore all types.
Please
read the following info on how to do some of the repair and learn
how to restore the gel coat to a mirror-like finish.
Contact us any time to perform or help with your repairs
drmsupport@denvermarine.com
The
outer surface of a fiberglass boat is normally a special resin
called gel coat. Gel coat has little structural value-the underlying
laminates of resin-saturated glass fabric provide that-but gel coat
protects the hull and gives it its color and shine.
When
the gel coat was originally sprayed into the hull mold, it-like any
gel-took on the shape and texture of the mold surface. The ultra
high gloss most new boats exhibit is due entirely to the highly
polished, mirror-like surface of the mold used in the original
construction of the boat.
Time
and exposure eventually erode the relatively soft surface of gel
coat, leaving it dull and chalky. Fortunately, the gloss usually can
be restored.
Cleaning
The first step in restoring the gloss to dull gel coat is always a
thorough cleaning. Add a cup of detergent to a gallon of water-warm
water is better-and use a sponge to wash the surface with this
solution. Be sure to protect your hands with rubber gloves.
If
mildew is present, add a cup of household bleach to your cleaning
solution. Difficult stains like fish blood and waterline scum may
require the direct application of a concentrated cleaner formulated
for fiberglass. Rinse the clean surface thoroughly and let it dry.
Degreasing
For dependable results from wax or polish, the gel coat surface must
be completely free of oil and grease. Detergents often fail to fully
remove these contaminants from porous gel coat. Wipe the entire
surface with a rag soaked in MEK (preferred) or acetone, turning the
rag often and replacing it when you run out of clean areas. Again,
protect your skin with thick rubber gloves.
Wax
Keeping gel coat coated with wax-starting when the boat is new-is
the best way to prolong its life. Regularly waxed gel coat can
retain its gloss for 15 years or more. The real purpose of a coat of
wax is to protect, but wax also has restorative properties if the
gel coat is not too badly weathered.
Application instructions vary among brands, but in general you apply
the wax with a cloth or foam pad using a circular motion. Let the
wax dry to a haze, then buff away the excess with a soft cloth, such
as an old bath towel. The remaining wax fills microscopic pitting in
the gel coat and provides a new, smooth, reflective surface.
Polishing
Polish is not a coating, but rather an abrasive-like extremely fine
sandpaper. Polishing removes the pitted surface rather than coating
it. Use a soft cloth to apply polish to a small area at a time,
rubbing with a circular motion until the surface becomes glassy.
After polishing, you should apply a coat of wax to protect the
surface and improve the gloss. Some polish products include wax in
their formulations.
Using Rubbing Compound
If the gel coat is weathered so badly that polish fails to restore
its shine, you will need the stronger abrasives rubbing compound
contains. Wax on the surface can cause the compound to cut unevenly,
so first remove all wax by "sweeping" the surface in one
direction-not back and forth-with rags saturated with dewax solvent
or toluene.
Select
a rubbing compound formulated for fiberglass and use it exactly like
polish, rubbing it with a circular motion until the surface turns
glassy. The gel coat on your boat is about 10 times as thick as the
paint on your car, so compound shouldn't cut all the way through it
as long as you are careful not to rub in one place too long. If the
gel coat starts to look transparent, stop.
After
the surface has been compounded, polish it, then coat it with wax
and buff it. Providing the gel coat has an adequate thickness-the
boat might have been compounded previously-this process will restore
the shine to fiberglass in almost any condition.
Do
You Need an Electric Buffer?
You can wax, polish, and compound by hand, but on anything but the
smallest boat, your arm is going to get very tired. An electric
buffer takes much of the work out of keeping a boat shining and is
less expensive-and less painful-than elbow replacement.
Electric buffers operate at relatively slow speeds, so don't try to
"make do" with a polishing bonnet fitted to a disk sander or a
sanding pad chucked into a drill. You will either ruin the surface
or ruin the tool. A buffer with an orbital motion will leave fewer
swirl marks.
Restorer
In recent years a number of products have come on the market that
claim to restore the surface of the gel coat. Restorer formulations
renew the gloss in essentially the same way as wax-by providing a
new smooth surface-but without the need for buffing. Results can be
dramatic, but because restorers are a plastic (acrylic)
coating-similar to urethane varnish-they can wear off, flake off,
and occasionally discolor. Restorer kits typically include a prep
wash and sometimes a polish in addition to the restorer. A
specialized stripper-for removing old sealer-is also necessary.
There
are variations in the recommended application, but in general it is
the same as already described-clean, polish, and coat. The acrylic
sealer is usually water-thin, so applying it to the hull is much
easier than, say, paste wax. And it dries to hard film, so no
buffing is needed. However, you do have to apply several coats-five
is typical-to get a good shine. If the product you have selected
doesn't include an applicator, use a sponge or a soft cloth to wipe
the sealer onto the gel coat. Drying times are short, so subsequent
coats can generally be applied almost immediately.
A
multicoated application can restore the shine to weathered gel coat
for up to a year, but when it is time to renew it, you will need to
remove the old sealer using the special stripper supplied in the kit
(or available separately). Apply five fresh coats of sealer and your
boat should shine for another year.
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