D
Doug T.
OK folks, I've read 20 dozen articles on blister repair but I'm at a loss now.A couple weeks ago I started grinding out the blisters in the hull of our 1977 Hunter 27. After doing about 200 of them -- from dime size to dollar size (paper dollar!) I gave that up and bought a planer. I spent yesterday and today planing all of the old paint and gel coat off the hull, from about 6 inches above the waterline to the bottom.This boat doesn't just have individual blisters, it has whole patches of them... great swaths of rot. Some sections of the hull look something like really bad, week-old poison ivy rashes -- you know, the kind that ooze pus and then dry out? That's the kind of texture I'm looking at.OK, I can deal with grinding out a couple hundred blisters and letting it all dry out for a couple of months, then sealing, filling, fairing, painting, etc. But what am I supposed to do with these big patches of blisters? I'm talking about patches that are approximately 2'x3' in size.What's most distressing is that it isn't just under the gel coat -- they are all at least one, sometimes two layers deep into the fiberglass. I'd attack the stuff with the planer, but I'm really concerned that I'm going to have to go so deep that I literally won't have any hull left.Has anyone here had to deal with this before? What did you do?Or is it simply time to cut the boat up for scrap?