miss ellie
New member
My 2004 22 has never been bottom painted. Apparently the prior owner did not leave it sit in the SC salt water when not using it.
Last month it sustained damage in a storm, consisting of gouges into but not through the bottom gelcoat (...ugh). The repair shop has given me the option of filling and fairing the gouges and (1) re-coating the entire bottom with gelcoat, or (2) re-coating it with a barrier coat and then 2 coats of bottom paint.
This boat sits on a mooring in Maine salt water June 1 to July 31, and Aug 20 to Sept 30. Its power-washed after each haulout and then left on its trailer. In two months there is plenty of barnacle growth, but it blasts off easily.
Depending on who you ask, and what you read, opinions vary on bottom paint versus just washing the bottom frequently, particularly for a trailerable boat. Having looked at all factors, I am firmly sitting on the exact center of the fence.
Anyone able to throw a little wisdom at this problem?
:roll:
Last month it sustained damage in a storm, consisting of gouges into but not through the bottom gelcoat (...ugh). The repair shop has given me the option of filling and fairing the gouges and (1) re-coating the entire bottom with gelcoat, or (2) re-coating it with a barrier coat and then 2 coats of bottom paint.
This boat sits on a mooring in Maine salt water June 1 to July 31, and Aug 20 to Sept 30. Its power-washed after each haulout and then left on its trailer. In two months there is plenty of barnacle growth, but it blasts off easily.
Depending on who you ask, and what you read, opinions vary on bottom paint versus just washing the bottom frequently, particularly for a trailerable boat. Having looked at all factors, I am firmly sitting on the exact center of the fence.
Anyone able to throw a little wisdom at this problem?
:roll: