Ask “Dr. Gel” Dave Weakley is the owner of American Boat Restoration and has been helping boaters keep their boats in fine trim and good repair for over 30 years from Catskill to Lake George & Western New England. by Dave Weakley “Email me or call me with your questions! I’ll be happy to help you out” email: [email protected] / Americanboatrestoration.com / tel: 518.577.7799 / cell: 413.665.7424 Multicolor Polyflake Repair …It’s an Art SKEETER a base color gelcoat (the background color) is sprayed. Next applied is the structure of the boat which is fiberglass cloth and resin. That was the manufacture steps taken. Now think about how to do a repair from the outside. It all has to be done in reverse. Adding multiple pins and colors makes it even more challenging. You will not feel the transition from one line/pin stripe to the next if the repair is done correctly. It will feel perfectly smooth. Straight gelcoat colors and polyflake must also match exactly in color, pattern, blend perfectly and not show any change from the new gelcoat to the existing. Unlike a car we don’t have door jams where you can finish at the end of a door panel. There are other challenges as well in order to reproduce the original gelcoat. Gelcoat does not spray out and lay down as smooth as paint. The newly sprayed surface resembles an orange peel. For each color that is applied it must cure over night before it can be sanded out. Remember with the repair being done in reverse on the outside the clear coat is over the polyflake and this is where sanding can be very tedious and tricky. Sand too much and you will sand right into the flake turning it silver. If this happens you get to do it all over again. Spraying the correct mil thickness of gelcoat is another important factor in a successful repair. Gelcoat will get brittle, turn yellow and or crack if too much material is applied. In a straight gelcoat color repair the mil thickness is approx. 20 mil thick. When reproducing a polyflake repair there is the background gelcoat color, a thin coat of clear gelcoat, dry flake and then another thin layer of clear gelcoat and last applied another coat of clear gelcoat. So given all these layers applied it’s imperative to stay within the 20 mil thickness. Add multicolor pins and stripes of gelcoat and it becomes a very complicated repair that should be done by a Master. Polyflake Repair Process Surface scratches in polyflake SKEETER B ass fishing boats are well known for their efficient, high performance, sleek, sparkling appearance; The perfect boat for so many enthusiastic fishermen. Bass anglers get from point “a” to point “b” in a hurry with their powerful engines and the hull design allows them to fish in shallow waters as well. Equipping these impressive boats with powerful engines, jack plates, electric trolling motors and high-tech fish find70 In some cases it is possible to wet sand surface scratches out of the clear gel coat that is covering the polyflake. If you can see any discoloration of the flake DO NOT attempt to sand out the scratch. Discoloration indicates that the scratch is through the clear coat and into the flake. If there are no discolorations begin to wet sand the area using a good grade (3M or Norton) 1000 grit wet paper, next use 1500 wet and 2000 wet grit. Sand in an area that is much larger than the scratched area. After sanding is complete; compound with TR 311, TR 308 and TR 301 and wax. Gashes through the clear coat, polyflake and/or into the fiberglass Using a carbide, grind out the damage May 2015 ers should be done properly; if not the weight and torque of the engine(s) and mounting procedures can cause stress cracks and delaminating. Another side affect of improper maintaining is gelcoat fade and chalking. How are polyflake boats repaired when unfortunate damage happens? Bass boats are often designed with multicolor pin stripes and are the most difficult and time consuming of all gelcoat repairs. Only a very experienced repair person should attempt repairs or the result could be a disaster that we see often. The repair should not be noticed; it should appear like it just came out of the mold it was built in, a show piece, resulting in a very happy boat owner. Let’s begin with very basic steps to initially build a boat. Two molds are constructed; the top or deck and the hull the bottom. The outside layer of the boat is sprayed in the mold first. This could be a combination of clear gelcoat or straight color gelcoat depending on the design of the boat. For the polyflake designs clear gelcoat is applied first then the flake is applied. Over the flake boatingonthehudson.com boatingonthehudson.com May 2015 71 Many steps in the process. “Great works are performed not by strength, but by perseverance” area. Fill the ground out area with an easy to sand vinyl ester filler. Sand it smooth- leaving a deficit to accommodate the background gelcoat color. This is usually black or dark blue gelcoat. Tape off and apply the background gelcoat with NO WAX additive and apply the PVA Allow to dry overnight Remove the PVA and sand the background gelcoat with 400 grit wet sandpaper; 400 is the minimum grit to allow for top coat clear adhesion. Sand to remove just the orange peel on the surface. Sand the area 8”- 10” beyond the repair area After it is sanded retape the sanded area just outside on the shiny gelcoat Using base coat reducer up to 25%, activated the same as any gelcoat spray a mist coat just where you want new polyflake to be in the repair area. Immediately after applying the mist coat blow the appropriate amount of polyflake on using a mouth atomizer or an airbrush with a polyflake attachement. This will take practice. Mouth atomizers can be purchased at a Craft supply store. 10. Apply a top coat of clear gel on the entire repair area but not out onto the shiny gelcoat. 11. Apply PVA. 12. Allow to dry overnight. 13. Be sure to remove all the PVA. 14. Sand with 400 grit wet to remove just the orange peel on the surface. 15. Then proceed to sand with Norton/Abranet/3M 600 grit-1000 grit-1500 grit- 2000 grit wet paper. 16. Compound with TR 311TR 308 TR 301 and apply wax. To repair multi color polyflake pins. If there are three pins for example tape off using fine line tape on the outside edges of each pin. After each pin is taped, tape over the exposed pins leaving only the first one to be sprayed. If there are multiple pins that are the same color they can be sprayed at the same time. 72 May 2015 boatingonthehudson.com Follow the Repair procedure above in Steps 1-13. Pull off the tape to expose the next pin to be repaired. Apply fine line tape over the pin that was just shot. Proceed to follow Steps 1-13 until all the pins have been shot. Remove all the fine line tape. Sand the area carefully just to remove the orange peel surface. Retape the outside perimeter just outside onto the shiny gelcoat. Follow repair Steps 10-16 to finish Polyflake repairs require a lot of skill and patience!! If you have a boat needing polyflake repair be sure to pick out a competent repair facility that can do the repair right the first time. A re-repair will cost you more. The photos of the Skeeter boat shows multiple pins of both flake and gelcoat. There are two edges of each color pin and the six pins had to be perfectly blended and matched. The boat, waked by a barge on the Hudson R. sustained major fiberglass fracture and gelcoat damage on the port and starboard sides. The majority of the fractures were on the starboard side above and below the rub rail going through all the pin colors and there was damage to the hull and deck seam. Cracks just in the gelcoat are called hairline cracks or spider cracks sometimes you can’t feel and can be difficult to see. Cracks you can feel mean there is damage in the laminate. This means the gelcoat needs to be ground out into the laminate until all the cracks are gone. Sometimes the laminate is paper thin. The laminate then needs to be layed up with the appropriate resins either polyesters or vinyl esters. Fiberglass cloth and or mat depending on the thickness required. The area is sanded to re-establish the original body lines. From here the correct gelcoats and flakes can be applied. After weeks of very precision tedious work the boat owner came to pick up his restored boat. When he drove up to it he was amazed at how great it looked. He was ecstatic and said “it looks better than when it was new!”. Learn All Aspects of Minor Gelcoat Repairs. GRINDING - MIXING - CATALYZING - SPRAYING - SANDING – BUFFING Tips on best tools & materials to use . All training provided at your location. Instructor - Dave Weakley, Boating On The Hudson & Beyond magazine’s “Ask Dr. Gel” Certified professional with over 35 yrs experience Have a boat that needs repair? This is the perfect opportunity to become skilled at minor gelcoat repair. americanboatrestoration.com tel 518.577.7799 • 413.665.7424 email- [email protected] “Give me a call; you have nothing to lose and everything to gain” boatingonthehudson.com May 2015 73
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