What is the fastest bottom paint? My boat is sailed in New England waters, it has an ablative coat, new bottom around 3 years ago. Is it worth it to go hard bottom paint? What is the best ablative coat for racing? The boat is hauled each fall and launched each spring.
The one that retards growth & slime the best for your waters.
It is always amusing to me, the "fastest bottom paint" questions. Sure every little bit makes a difference, but I suspect, seeing as none of us are racing in the America's cup, that focusing on other skills that can make the boat go faster will be more beneficial than which paint, assuming the "fastest" and the next level down are both in good shape.
Funny story... We had a very, very competitive multi-day one design J-24 regatta up here last fall. The best race crews hauled their boats here from all over the country.
Who won over the multi-day event? A local mooring sailed boat, with, you guessed it, bottom paint...

It beat lots of other "trailer baby" boats with gelcoat and no paint. It all came down to sailing skills, not who had the newest and best sails, lightest and least stretchy running rigging or fastest paint. The boat that won simply had good consistent sailing...
What I took away.... Know and focus on your local waters, currents, winds, have a good tactician and proper sail trim, practice your sets and tacks and starts and your bottom paint won't matter much even when competing against "trailer babies"...
Also there is a lot to be said for an ablative over hard paint, cost wise, over the long haul. Hard paint will eventually need to be stripped and a full bottom job done. Most hard paints killed when hauled for the winter and a fresh coat is needed each spring thus creating build up. Most multi-season co-polymer ablatives are haul & re-launch capable and with proper care the bottom can remain smooth for a very, very long time without needed to address lifting and flaking chunks of paint..
Just my .02...