Jonboat2Bassboat
Petty Officer 3rd Class
- Joined
- Jul 27, 2012
- Messages
- 89
I have a small ding in the gel coat and need some tips on repairing it correctly the first time. The boat is a Kevlar kayak but how to repair gel coat should be the same no matter what boat it is on. As you can see in the photo, the ding is right where the chine (bend in the shape of the hull) is. My guess is the previous owner hit a log, the area flexed and popped back out. There is no structural damage. I can reinforce the interior with a Kevlar patch. Where I need help is making the exterior repair blend in with the highly reflective exterior finish.
Are the steps outlined good practice?
1 - Chip off any lose gel coat2 - Edge areas where fiberglass shows thru
3 - V-notch superficial cracks so gel coat will sink in
4 - Slightly overfill dings and cracks with color matched gel coat
5 - Once set, sand flush with 150 grit then wet sand in steps to 6 or 800, maybe finer
6 - Buff with rubbing compound then polishing compound
7 - Buff and polish with paste wax
Sound like a plan?
Will a 6" random orbital variable speed sander with a buffing / polishing pad produce a good finish or would a dedicated $100 random orbital variable speed buffer / polisher produce a noticeably better finish?
I know my way around a workshop and tools and have done some fiberglassing many years ago. This job is not above my pay grade, just need some tips to do it right the first time.
Are the steps outlined good practice?
1 - Chip off any lose gel coat2 - Edge areas where fiberglass shows thru
3 - V-notch superficial cracks so gel coat will sink in
4 - Slightly overfill dings and cracks with color matched gel coat
5 - Once set, sand flush with 150 grit then wet sand in steps to 6 or 800, maybe finer
6 - Buff with rubbing compound then polishing compound
7 - Buff and polish with paste wax
Sound like a plan?
Will a 6" random orbital variable speed sander with a buffing / polishing pad produce a good finish or would a dedicated $100 random orbital variable speed buffer / polisher produce a noticeably better finish?
I know my way around a workshop and tools and have done some fiberglassing many years ago. This job is not above my pay grade, just need some tips to do it right the first time.