New colour of fiberglass hull

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Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Need advice for a future purchase; Fiberglass boat, deck; Paint or new gel coat? Would like to take a white hull and change it to dark navy. What are costs and pros and cons??

thanks!
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Hey Stu, thanks. I've seen your other responses here, and respect your opinion. IF one were to make a colour change, what is best way?
thanks
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Stu, THANKS for the link. That is an awesome article. Will keep me busy for a little while.
thanks
 
Mar 20, 2012
3,983
Cal 34-III, MacGregor 25 Salem, Oregon
if you must change the color, or for some other reason that you decide to paint the boat, use the best quality paint you can get. it will last longer with less maintainence, is easier to touch up and is way cheaper than new gelcoat....

and if you want it to look its very best for the longest possible time, put most of your effort in to the prep work before you get to the painting part.
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Thanks centerline,, I completely get that painting is really about the prep work. So the vote is to not re-do a gel coat, but to paint?
thanks.
 

RichH

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Feb 14, 2005
4,773
Tayana 37 cutter; I20/M20 SCOWS Worton Creek, MD
Changing the color of a hull from white to a 'dark' color has risk as most hulls that are originally black or dark blue have 'extra thick' fiberglass matting layers to prevent 'print through' of the course fiberglass roving layer - the actual structural layer of the fiberglass composite structure. 'Print-through' occurs due to additional thermal cycling of the hotter dark surfaces due to the 'dark' color and after a few years of sun exposure will show up as 'slight pimples' all over the hull. Such hotter temperatures forces a 'further' forced curing of the polyester and is 'uneven'.

When changing from white to 'dark', be sure that the particular boat brand you select historically does not 'print-through'. Do a careful search of such color changed boats by walking the boat yards and observe the exact boat type, model and manufacturer. Print-through can be very ugly, can require that the print-through be resanded/repaired which can be very costly and time consuming.

Most white hulls with relatively thin matting layers between the roving and the gelcoat cannot be painted or recolored to 'dark'. If you have this color change done by a professional be sure to get a warrantee that the color change will not result in 'print-through' that shows the outlines of the underlying roving layer - and get it in writing. Most white colored boats built in the 1960s through the 1990s will eventually 'print-through' when painted black or other dark colors.
 

RichH

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Feb 14, 2005
4,773
Tayana 37 cutter; I20/M20 SCOWS Worton Creek, MD
That article deals mostly with epoxy hull boats, polyester hulled boats can be 'worse' w/r print-through.
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
How can I tell if a fiberglass hull is either epoxy or polyester? One of the boats I like is a Catalina 30' Tall rig. Probably just Google the model and year? What do you think? Also, could a professional who has experience with changing the hull colour be able to know what the likelihood will be after looking at a particular boat? There are a good number of glossy dark blue hulls in our area, I suspect near the equator is even worse?
 

RichH

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Feb 14, 2005
4,773
Tayana 37 cutter; I20/M20 SCOWS Worton Creek, MD
Catalinas et al are polyester .... usually when you get into the mega-expensive boats are they epoxy hulled.

Those glossy dark blue hulls were probably that way from the factory ... and most likely have extra thick matting layers to 'cushion' the underlying roving layers from print-through. Rarely will you ever see a long term 'successful' color change from white to 'dark' ... they usually always result in print-through.
 
Jan 19, 2010
12,553
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
There is a very good article in the most recent edition of "Good Old Boat" about painting a hull to a mirror shine with rolled on Alwgrip.
 

Gunni

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Mar 16, 2010
5,937
Beneteau 411 Oceanis Annapolis
I have a factory flag-blue hull, blue gelcoat, live in your neighborhood and see lots of hulls that have been painted dark. There is a high risk that the hull roving will print through on boats not built for a dark color. In addition, the hull absorbs huge amounts of heat in the summer making A/C mandatory. Even though I like the look, I would not go dark again. Any contrasting hull shade will highlight the lovely sweep of a nice shear. So I understand your desire to contrast the hull and deck color. I see boat hulls painted shades of light blue, grey, or green that look stunning. Particularly fond of that fog grey color.
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Gunni - thanks, we will have ac in any case - purchase a boat with it, or add it, so not as worried about the summer heat factor ( I think!). I've talked to a couple of people who have the dark hulls, and they don't feel a big difference down below, but when they touch the hull they do feel it's hotter than white hulls. because of the number of blue hulls, it seems like it must be ok for those owners. Also dicussions about near the equator and further north where we are, dunno, it seems if there is that degree of parsing out the details, it's not a slam dunk kind of issue so I'm thinking the look will be worth the pain in the temp. department...


BUT, any advise on this part - would a very good fiberglass person be able to tell in advance if the colour will, or will not, cause the print through.. so I look for someone who can advise of this pre-purchase? Or,, the idea is that no one can tell in advance, and it's just a risk you take when painting your hull a darker colour?
.... but also have read hull manufacturers discuss the odd nature of this "print through" even when un-moulding the hulls just created.. yikes!
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Gunni - sorry to have replied so quickly - question about your boat; because your Flag Blue colour was applied in the factory, you must have no issues with the print-through, correct? Is your main reason for not going dark next time the temperature ( in the cabin, or on the hull fittings, etc?) ?

My understanding is that boats like yours skip the whole print though issue due to additional layup of the fiberglass during manufacture and therefore don't have the particular pattern of the fabric showing. What are your thoughts about this? Thanks, Brad
 
Feb 26, 2004
22,985
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
Gunni - thanks, we will have ac in any case -
How does one use a/c at anchor? In our climate we don't have it nor do any of our brethren, so I just don't know. Folks in FL and your neck of the woods might.

FWIW, we've spent maybe all of three nights on the boat in our marina. All the rest have been anchored out (95%) or the rest at other marinas visiting. That's in 25 years. :eek:
 
Nov 3, 2013
17
to be determinded! 30 will be Annapolis
Stu - ok, duh.

so, while I'm not getting caught up in so many details ,, I'm thinking sailing = daytime = breezes = little fans maybe. Anchor = sunset/evening = cooler = fans or most likely stay in hotel at marina. Our boat will be 30 minutes away from home, so not the end of the world if it's just too hot of a summer day to go sailing. (WHEN would that be???) Perhaps what others are saying is the dark hulls get too hot if you want to use swim ladders, play off/around the boat and the hull gets just that hot? Gunni - what are your thoughts?

Then again, for our first boat, it might be most prudent to leave the hull white and be sure the next boat has more of the "pretty" features we really want.
 

Gunni

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Mar 16, 2010
5,937
Beneteau 411 Oceanis Annapolis
Gunni - sorry to have replied so quickly - question about your boat; because your Flag Blue colour was applied in the factory, you must have no issues with the print-through, correct? Is your main reason for not going dark next time the temperature ( in the cabin, or on the hull fittings, etc?) ?

My understanding is that boats like yours skip the whole print though issue due to additional layup of the fiberglass during manufacture and therefore don't have the particular pattern of the fabric showing. What are your thoughts about this? Thanks, Brad
Brad: My hull was constructed by Beneteau USA with flag blue gelcoat, not paint. It is 10 years old and shows no sign of print through. The cabin gets very warm in the summer. At anchor or at the dock in the summer with 7 overhead hatches and 10 ports open you can feel the heat radiating off the hull sides. The interior furnishings absorb the heat and it requires 2 A/C units (28,000 total BTU), 30 amps of electricity and a 5,500 watt diesel generator to manage the temperature. My deck is standard white gelcoat and presents no temperature problems.
 

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Oct 26, 2008
6,240
Catalina 320 Barnegat, NJ
Shore is a good looking color, though. I saw a Bene at boat show that had a lighter blue-gray color that I really liked. It sounded like they were discontinuing the color though. The folks from the dealership in Haverstraw were selling that boat.
 
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