Re: Epoxy Paint
Did some checking at a few websites on prices. The pool paint is about 50 to 65 a gallon, it is twice as much at marine paint. However one brand of pool paint has a warrenty of 8 years for just one coat. The main draw back is the area of coverage, it seems that most of the pool paint will only cover about 150 square feet per gallon. I have figured out it will take about 4 gallons to double coat. I will probably wait until my buddies paint a pool this spring. They get huge discounts on it since they buy in 5 gal and 55 gal containers. That should make it about 35 a gallon. As far as application, I'll get 4 cheap sprayguns, thin epoxy with quality acetone/MEK mixture to eliminate the orange peal. I'll have 4 people helping, a mixer, a cleaner, and an 2 spraying. This is the process we use on the pools, and works well. It allows for a continuious application. Both sprayers start in the front and work back to the stern where the fresh paint meets fresh rather than have fresh merging with paint that has been on the boat curing while you make your way around the boat. I know in the pools where you end up overlapping fresh to cured, you can always pick out that spot. I may just paint the bottom this year, see how it does, and then wait till spring of 2003 to do the topside. Right now it has some really nasty looking antifoul stuff that to me is ugly plus it is real rough like 80 grit sandpaper. I know this can't be good on my performance.<br />For those that use epoxy paint on fiberglass, here is a tip that I picked up from working with the stuff. If you first take a wet towell with acetone and wash down the surface that you are going to paint (don't let it stay wet for long or it can raise some existing paint or make your fiberglass to soft!) then take another clean towell and then dry off the area you just prepped. This seems to soften the existing surface, and works as a final prep before painting. It allows your new paint to melt/bond with the old for better adhesion. YOU MUST WEAR APPROIATE BREATHING GEAR. The fumes from this stuff is extremely dangerous as well as explosive. This is especially when you do a final wash with acetone and during the spraying. Thanks guys