Matching (or close) Bottom Paint

Ekea

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ill be painting the bottom soon and want something that is as close to color matched to the GW gelcoat color as possible. it would need to be a hard paint (not ablative). has anyone used something that looks pretty close?
 
Light hulls ( white:) will show slime and marine growth more than darker colors
 
Light hulls ( white:) will show slime and marine growth more than darker colors
thats fine. my boat lives on a trailer. more than anything, i want to pretty it up since the current paint is splotchy and i dont want to pay to restore it to gelcoat and definitely dont have time to do that myself. i want it to look as close to not bottom painted as possible
 
I'd go with a contast (like a muscle car interior, I favor black) as you are using ablative paint. The whites will fade to light brown over time anyway and look like slime/scum.
 
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I'd go with a contast (like a muscle car interior, I favor black) as you are using ablative paint. The whites will fade to light brown over time anyway and look like slime/scum.
im using hard, not ablative.

i prefer the look of no bottom paint, so i am trying to minimize contrast
 
it looks like im going with petit vivid. i heard on THT that "standard" pigments can be added to it. i plan to call petit and confirm
 
Ask about compatibility with existing bottom paint. Appropriate prep is critical
Of course make sure you follow the instructions especially about using a 3/8 nap or smaller roller. That paint like other Pettit paints does not like thick coats.
 
I had Vivid on my last boat. Can’t help with color, it was black.

It was a perfectly fine bottom paint. Looked much better than the typical chalky ablative stuff. Boat was trailered and no issues with it over 6-7ish years. Still looked good when I sold it.
 
FWIW- My current boat came with nasty old bottom paint. If I ever get around to removing it, I’d go back with VC Performance.

But that also looks like a lot more prep than what I did before rolling on the Vivid.
 
petit's website says that it is "excellent for racing, trailering, or rack stored boats". id assume long enough
From that statement, it sounds logical - but it might be worth a 2-minute phone call to them to verify. Although in your case, I guess it really doesn't matter if the paint stops protecting since you're not keeping it in the water.

But commenting about your first post regarding "needing to be a hard paint"... that's not true, even if you're trailering all the time. The "worst" that happens is it wears away a little where the bunks are... and of course no one will ever see that part!
 
technically, i dont need bottom paint. i was just trying to keep the discussion on non-ablative paints because i dont want one that will wear off
 
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technically, i dont need bottom paint. i was just trying to keep the discussion on non-ablative paints because i dont want one that will wear off
Gotcha.

For what it's worth, it's going to take years for the paint to wear off to the point where you start to see through it with ablative.

I haven't dealt with hard paint in long time (since the ablatives are generally the "go-to" anymore)... but when it comes time to touch up the hard paint... isn't there scraping and sanding involved?