Tomcat wrote:
Anything an be fixed, You'll be laying glass on inner hull so it'll seal. If you find massive amounts of delamination and voids it'll be time to consider if you want to go further.
Far as osmosis blisters go... grind em out and prime with 2 part epoxy (Duratec
http://duratec1.com/duratec/) then sand, sand sand. That'll be your barrier coat and paint primer..
From what ive been reading, and seeing in builds and repairs this amount of blistering would be easier to grind off most of the gel instead of punchuring each one. They are small, and densliy formed over the whole wet surface except the bottom of the pad. No blisters there.
I figure ill have about 5-6 k in this boat and thats without motor but everything else. Id sink another 1-3 k in a V6 after that at some point.
Im at the turning point almost where i could sell off the stuff no real financial loss and buy a water ready boat for 5-8k, or jump full into this one.
I just thought that some boats get so rotten its almost impossible to make em rite again no matter how much money. I mean i know you could keep throwing glass at it, but that would defite the point of a hydrostream wouldnt it? Fast and lite, not over built and heavy?
If i stopped now i could sell of the rigging and trailer, and hang the boat from a tree at my parents place and be even. Then just buy something surveyed for the price id pay.
Im sure yall know what i mean. I dont want to throw so much glass in it that its heavy to make up for a layer of useless in between the new.
This all comes from a few threads i read here and there about people getting into boats and turning away becuse the skin was to far gone to rebuild a good lite boat in the end. Moeny aside.