I OWN A 2007 GRADY WHITE WHICH IS USED IN FRESH WATER,WHEN THE BOAT WAS REMOVED FROM THE WATER THE BOTTOM AND SIDES BELOW THE WATER LINE WERE BLISTERED,DOES GRADY WHITE HAVE A PROBLEM WITH THEIR GELCOAT.
jtsailjt said:It's not really a gel coat issue, that's just what it looks like because the swelling in the underlying fiberglass makes the gelcoat appear to blister outwards. You shouldn't have to barrier coat a modern fiberglass boat to avoid blistering. Boats that are 20 to 30 years old frequently have blister problems because manufacturers didn't understand what caused them. But most boat builders have long since switched over to vinlyester resins that resist osmotic blistering much better than older polyester resin fiberglass hulls did. I don't know what modern Grady hulls are made of (mine's a '78 model), but certainly by 2007, Grady should have been using vinylester resin. I would contact the Grady White manufacturer and ask them if your boat is covered by a hull warranty. If it's not and you have to deal with this yourself, you need to grind out the blisters, refill them, and then apply a barrier coat below the water line, and you need to do it sooner rather than later because the existing blisters will only get worse.
NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:Yeah..................., put a Pursuit or any other boat for that matter........ Vinylester is NOT waterproof either, epoxy IS.
NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:Yeah..................., put a Pursuit or any other boat for that matter in the water for 2-3 weeks without epoxy barrier and/or bottom paint and tell me if you got blisters or not. Vinylester is NOT waterproof either, epoxy IS.
SoutheastFL said:NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:Yeah..................., put a Pursuit or any other boat for that matter in the water for 2-3 weeks without epoxy barrier and/or bottom paint and tell me if you got blisters or not. Vinylester is NOT waterproof either, epoxy IS.
Pretty silly point cause Pursuit warranties their boats against blistering and doubt they would if, as you said, blistered in 2-3 weeks !
GYP-SEA said:I have an '01 Advance 247 and it has a base coat and 3 or 4 coat of bottom paint and noticed this spring that there is blistering on the Starboard/Ste :cry: rn area.
NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:If that is the case, then go ahead and leave your brand new Pursuit unpainted in the water for 3 weeks and then start your claim with them.
NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:SoutheastFL said:NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:Yeah..................., put a Pursuit or any other boat for that matter in the water for 2-3 weeks without epoxy barrier and/or bottom paint and tell me if you got blisters or not. Vinylester is NOT waterproof either, epoxy IS.
Pretty silly point cause Pursuit warranties their boats against blistering and doubt they would if, as you said, blistered in 2-3 weeks !
If that is the case, then go ahead and leave your brand new Pursuit unpainted in the water for 3 weeks and then start your claim with them.
richie rich said:NOTHING ELSE MATTERS said:If that is the case, then go ahead and leave your brand new Pursuit unpainted in the water for 3 weeks and then start your claim with them.
NEM...he doesn't even own a Pursuit
My Grady is over 20 years old...had the hull sand blasted 2 years ago to remove old layers of bottom paint.....hull was perfect, never a blister, at a marina all its life.....put 5 coats of Interprotect on the hull.....I guess it will be another 20 years before I buy my Pursuit.... raise