reelfishin
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
I acquired a rather solid Starcraft Starchief over the summer. It came from a freshwater area and therefore is lacking all the usually corrosion issues.
However, the boat was repainted at some point, apparently over the original paint, with what looks to be to be house paint or some other very thick paint.
The problem is that the finish is now cracking badly, the entire boat has the texture of alligator skin. The paint is cracked, shrunk, and lifting. I looks like when you coat something with paint stripper and let it sit, then forget it and let it dry.
What gets me is that even the original paint is affected, and it's all over, 100% of the exterior surface. If I take an old credit card, I can brush away nearly 1/2 of the paint, a blast with some high pressure air takes away another 1/4 of it, but I'm left with many stubborn spots that won't come off.
Where the paint comes off with air or by scraping, it leaves clean, shiny unsanded aluminum. Who ever painted it before most likely scuffed the original paint and painted right over it.
So far aircraft stripper has no effect on this paint and I don't really want to sand it and scratch the hull all up. My plan is to repaint the whole hull in white epoxy once all of the suspect paint is gone.
The paint on it has the texture of 26 grit sandpaper when you rub your hand over it. The last owner was running it that way.
What gets me is what caused it? I've seen paint deteriorate but never like this, and on multiple colors and all surfaces. If the paint they used was bad, then I'd have figured it would have lifted and left the original powder coated aluminum, but it sort of shrunk and curled up in tiny little 1/16" sections and lifted the old color with it. The boat is 18' with a 7' beam width, sanding it would take ages and being it's a lapstrake hull, getting it perfect could take many, many hours.
Has anyone any experience with soda blasting?
I have a guy nearby that says he can strip it all off in a few hours. My concern is denting the aluminum or warping it by blasting.
However, the boat was repainted at some point, apparently over the original paint, with what looks to be to be house paint or some other very thick paint.
The problem is that the finish is now cracking badly, the entire boat has the texture of alligator skin. The paint is cracked, shrunk, and lifting. I looks like when you coat something with paint stripper and let it sit, then forget it and let it dry.
What gets me is that even the original paint is affected, and it's all over, 100% of the exterior surface. If I take an old credit card, I can brush away nearly 1/2 of the paint, a blast with some high pressure air takes away another 1/4 of it, but I'm left with many stubborn spots that won't come off.
Where the paint comes off with air or by scraping, it leaves clean, shiny unsanded aluminum. Who ever painted it before most likely scuffed the original paint and painted right over it.
So far aircraft stripper has no effect on this paint and I don't really want to sand it and scratch the hull all up. My plan is to repaint the whole hull in white epoxy once all of the suspect paint is gone.
The paint on it has the texture of 26 grit sandpaper when you rub your hand over it. The last owner was running it that way.
What gets me is what caused it? I've seen paint deteriorate but never like this, and on multiple colors and all surfaces. If the paint they used was bad, then I'd have figured it would have lifted and left the original powder coated aluminum, but it sort of shrunk and curled up in tiny little 1/16" sections and lifted the old color with it. The boat is 18' with a 7' beam width, sanding it would take ages and being it's a lapstrake hull, getting it perfect could take many, many hours.
Has anyone any experience with soda blasting?
I have a guy nearby that says he can strip it all off in a few hours. My concern is denting the aluminum or warping it by blasting.