It's been awhile since I've had time to update, work is INSAINE right now, the boating industry has exploded because of the virus. The bad news is I haven't been able to make much headway with my projects on the boat, but the good news is the fiberglass repair is almost done!
Like a lot of these types of things, when he started digging into the repair we started putting a timeline of probable events together. It would appear the boat took a hard blow low on the hull-side at some point. There is a previous repair here that was very well done, but it would also appear that at that time the stress fracture under the chine wasn't visible and went undetected. At a later date it would appear that the chine crack opened up and the boat was probably and unfortunately cheaply repaired and sold.
So to repair the repair he ground out all of the filler in the damaged areas, added two layers of biaxial mat on the inside and outside of the hull. Each inner layer consisted of overlapping 6" squares, so once both layers were put down if you were to dissect any spot of the repair it would actually have 6 layers of biaxial on the inside alone. He followed that up with two layers of mat and an epoxy barrier coat. On the outside he laid two sheets of biaxial, one slightly larger than the other, to add a little more strength but also make final shaping of the hull-side easier.
The final shot is something of a secret, I'll put up more pictures of it when the boat is finished, hopefully later this week.
Other things to note:
- I took the pictures during varying stages of exploratory sanding and repair so don't take any one picture as a finishing point for any particular stage of the repair.
- Our glass guy made a point to tell me that in his 25 years of doing glass work he's never seen a boat with thicker factory gelcoat. This is the first Grady White he's worked on (because of where he used to live he's mostly worked on ski/wake, cruiser and go fast boats) and other than the crappy repair he seems to be pretty impressed with the factory layup/construction.
-We are using vinyl-ester resin (OK'ed by Grady customer service)
- It's interesting watching a professional vs reading internet "experts". At various points I would see something that would get a normal person absolutely roasted online. I'd ask him about it and once he explained what he was doing it made a lot of sense. I wish I could have talked to him when I did the transom in my old SeaSwirl, he would have saved me ALOT of time haha!
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I know those look like large air bubbles but its actually the gray gelcoat in some nooks and crannies that were left behind during surface prep.