interthane plus system
I painted my mast using the two part Interlux Interthane plus paint and associated two part primer over a year ago. No etching, just sanding the chalk off trying not to go to bare metal where possible. Gloss is still like (or better than perhaps) new and there is absolutely no evidence of any paint flaking or chipping. The spar gets comments on its appearance often. The paint is unbelievably hard. Painted the pedestal as well as boat topsides and deck at the same time. Same result. Great paint.Absolutely essential to carefully follow directions as to prepaaration, thinning, application, keeping a wet edge, sanding between coats, etc.etc.. Great idea to do some dummy runs before tackling the real thing as there is a narrow range of paint and primer consistency that flattens out nicely and does not run. Painting a dinghy first is a good idea. Unquestionably the most challenging paint I have ever tackled but such a superior product when properly applied that its worth the effort. I just about got it down pat by the time I was finished after several batches less than perfect and making a lot of mistakes. Biggest mistake on the mast that I made was not protecting against dew ( I was painting outside) on the green paint. moisture on green paint cuts gloss drastically. Best application procedure I came up for my H33 Kenyon secion was to paint with roller with all hardware removed, supporting the mast on two sawhorses with a saddle support fitting the forward section of the mast. This way, The roller can pretty easily paint all the way round the mast for perhaps a couple of roller widths and still keep the requisite wet edge. Using this paint requires a lot of planning since the wet edge doesn't stay but a couple of minutes. Any misses just have to be left and sanded out and caught on the next coat. Good luckTerry