76SeaRay
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2017
- Messages
- 1,071
So, this 76 Sea Ray appears to be all original gelcoat. The hull appears pretty good and the guy that glassed my new transom did some touch up work on scratches and gouges around the outside of the hull. When he buffed the hull areas the shine seemed to come back pretty good. The deck on the other hand (this is a hard top so has extra "deck" pieces) is pretty faded, chalky and there are scratches, a few small holes to fill, and a few stress cracks to cover. I plan to redo the gelcoat on the deck (rub rail up) and hardtop but budget is getting thin. I would rather have someone do it but down to doing it myself to save money. I haven't done any gelcoat work before. I have messed around with auto paint (epoxy primer, base/clear) a bit and will be repainting the outdrive. I have two gravity feed guns but the nozzles are somewhere around 1.5 or 1.75 if I remember correctly. I also have an old suction gun but don't know the nozzle size. I have an 80 gallon dual cylinder compressor. The boat is in a closed shop and I have a small heat pump to warm the shop (running 32 to 45 degrees outside right now) and it struggles but can get to 65 to 70 degrees.
First question is how hard is it for a newbie to do a gelcoat spray job??
Second question is the best gun to use as a beginner??
Third question is how forgiving is the gelcoat, getting it mixed, and maintaining the right temperatures?
Thanks.....
First question is how hard is it for a newbie to do a gelcoat spray job??
Second question is the best gun to use as a beginner??
Third question is how forgiving is the gelcoat, getting it mixed, and maintaining the right temperatures?
Thanks.....