The VC17 on my new boat has some raised and missing areas and it's believed that there's no barrier coat. I figured I'd might well strip it and start fresh. What's your preferred method of removing VC17 and why?
Mesh paper wasn't very common when I removed the VC17, so I resorted to plain old sandpaper. Last spring when I was prepping the bottom for more ablative paint, I used the mesh paper and regular paper, the mesh lasted longer, didn't clog, and the dust collector was more efficient with less dust in the air.This is what I suspected. Thanks for confirming Dave! The mesh sandpaper really made that big of a difference?
Does anyone else find it ironic that we use copper pipes in our houses?
You're just trying to show off your shiny new prop againI have sanded the rough and flaking spots, smoothed things out and then repainted with VC17. As long as you get the flaking stuff off, and get it as smooth as you want…wipe with some solvent and paint.
But if the goal is to remove it all, and apply barrier coat, that will be a big job with an orbital sander.
View attachment 227820 View attachment 227821
Tally Ho upon launch this spring after VC-17 application.
Greg
Why ironic?Does anyone else find it ironic that we use copper pipes in our houses?
I'll grab some this week. IIRC, most of them are around the keel. No obvious signs of grounding. It'd be kinda difficult to do so in this area anywaysDo you have photos of the wrinkles?
I will probably try the new formulation once my stash is depleted.vc 17 is illegal in Canada now but grandfathered till ones supply is gone. We bought a case which should be good for 4 years but then have to consider what comes next, any ideas?
thks
Colin