browntdb":2bbxas5e said:
It is the original paint under the jel coat. product said it would not harm pain or jel coat. It just looks like the paint is oxidized and needs polished but I don't know which product to use for a boat.
Okay, well just to be clear, paint and gelcoat are two different things. Gelcoat is a polyester resin, which on the C-Dory is laid up in the mold as the first layer. One wouldn't gelcoat over paint, but people do paint over gelcoat. At any rate, gelcoat is quite restorable, generally, so I would generally try to restore it if possible (if that's what you still have). If gelcoat (eventually) gets past the point of no return, then paint is the next logical step (or if one wants to change the color of course).
Thing is, you would use different techniques or products on gelcoat or paint (and different things for different types of paint, which can vary from a one-part alkyd to a one-part latex, to a two-part LPU, and etc.). So step one is to figure out what you have on the boat - the original gelcoat or something else.
Sunbeam
PS: Is this the product you used or was it a different product by MaryKate? (I guessed this one because it is a gel, but they make a number of different cleaners.)
PPS: A note on gelcoat waxing: Wax is generally used to protect the existing finish. It will add a bit of its own shine, but if your gelcoat isn't shiny, the first step would be to bring back the shine by compounding or even wet-sanding, and then polishing. Then once you have that re-developed the shine (basically by exfoliating the gelcoat),
then wax to protect if from UV and other atmospheric factors. If you do have gelcoat and the acid dulled it, I would think you removed a wax or poliglow type product.