Re: Gel Coat Repair Help Needed
Gel coat won't stick to epoxy all that well and that repair is small enough to do it with gel coat putty and then straight gel coat.
Sand a very small area around it with 180 or so grit paper, use a little coarser paper to sand the gouge itself. You should be able to get some fillers for the gel coat at a local Fiberglass supply store and you won't need much at all. You should use some milled fiber (very short strands of glass) and silica (has many names), the glass strands give it some strength and the silica will thicken it and keep it from sagging. You can shred up some fiberglass mat if you can't find milled fiber, this can be found at hardware and auto parts stores, even stores like Wal-Mart carry it.
If the gouge is shallow you can just build it with gel coat without fillers if you want.
Fill the gouge with putty, keep all of it in the hole, not on the surrounding area and let it get hard. Now sand off any high areas, its best to have the repair slightly lower than the surrounding surface at this point and it frequently is because the gel coat will shrink as it cures. Now you can brush some gel coat over the repair and the area you sanded around it (1/2"), you have a choice to make, you can cover it with some cellophane, this will somewhat level the surface and it will give a well cure surface. Without the cellophane it be a little rougher on the surface and possible tacky. The tacky surface can clog the sand paper, but its such a small area its not a big deal, or you can wash the surface with acetone, it will remove the sticky surface.
Sand and buff, after that you shouldn't be able to see it easily.