wotrock wrote:
Nice work. So have you ever refinished mainly to get rid of scratches?
Kinda. Sorta. Maybe. There is a difference between “get rid of” and “hide the visibility of”. Even three coats of paint will not fill in every scratch unless they are very shallow; the scratches won’t be as visible, but it the right light/glare they will still be apparent.
I have needed to lay a coat of epoxy on a few hulls before painting when I had done major repairs. A rolled and tipped epoxy coat, wet sanded before painting, did a better job of filling in the scratches, but even with two coats of topside paint on the cured/sanded epoxy some (far fewer) scratches remained.
Once painted a wet sanded epoxy coat often does a decent job of filling in some spider cracks. I’m guessing faint spider cracks are much narrower than scrapes and scratches. And maybe not as deep, or just easier to epoxy fill?
Reducing the scratches might add a little speed or glide to a blemished hull, racers that that care, but that improvement was only apparent to me on one peculiar canoe.
The Malecite was a protopype from Mad River. One of a kind, an ultralight Kevlar Malecite with IQ Gunwales, a combination that made no sense, the IQ gunwales are heavy. Beyond that MRC had used too thin a “skin coat”. That white skin coat was so thin that the weave of the underlying fabric was showing through in a few areas when new, especially at the stems.
Over time that coat of whatever skin became thinner and thinner across the hull surface and the increasingly exposed weave became a dirt magnet. The Malecite was dirt ugly, impossible to keep clean and seemed increasingly slow. Or maybe I just don’t like paddling dirty boats; pollen, road grime and the like can’t help with laminar flow.
P9211228 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I don’t think that decreasing speed and glide was simply my imagination; with the weave largely exposed the hull must have presented more wetted surface and drag. The last time I paddle the Malecite before repairs was with a friend group and I was struggling to bring up the rear. It felt like I was paddling a barge with no glide.
I scoured the hull with a bristle brush and Scotchbrite pad to remove the weave embedded dirt and the whatever the skincoat was essentially vanished even before I wet sanded it, leaving golden Kevlar. After the epoxy coat, first coat of topside white going on.
PA261301 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I had already bought white topside paint and learned a lesson. I should have waited until the hull was scoured, washed and wet sanded to choose a paint color. Fighting Lady Yellow would perhaps have been a better choice to match the Kevlar color beneath.
https://www.google.com/search?q=pettit+ ... 2M&vssid=lBut the epoxy and two paint coats did thoroughly fill the exposed weave. Wet sanded after the first coat of topside white.
PA311313 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The Malecite looked like new with the second coat of paint and, more importantly - not just my imagination - the speed and glide was restored. All dressed up it is again a good looking canoe.
PB081340 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Since a quart of paint will usually lay 2+ coats on a 16’ canoe I figure each coat was less than pound, including the epoxy coat. A pint is a pound, two pints per quart, etc. I wouldn’t want to add 3lbs to a UL Kevlar canoe, but the Malecite already had heavy IQ gunwales.
Soloized, fully dressed, with utility/sail thwart, foot brace, knee bumpers, D-rings, improved seat and etc the Malecite had a finished weight of 55lbs. I neglected to weigh it before I started, but that outfitting usually weighs about 2lbs, the epoxy and two paint coats, a pint each, added less than 3lbs.
Would I rather the Malecite weigh 50lbs? Absolutely, the standard Kevlar and gel coat version was speced at 50lbs, and the ultra-light Kevlar/PVC version (per MRC “skin coat” not “gel coat”, Kevlar, S-glass, PVC foam diamond) weighed 40lbs.