J
Jim Willis
Blister facts, fiction(?) and fixing.
Thought I had incorporated all this in Fiberglass Trilogy #3 (A&B). This was drawn together from all I have read, seen been told and done. You will see it in the Gelcoat and Plastics Forum. This includes the "bad years for blisters" myth.Now to specifics. ALL blisters start small and should be fixed BEFORE they become big. Big blisters have to be fixed with some structural strenght too (glass fiber if down into the laminate."Pox" in the barrier coat can just be sanded off and coated recoated with epoxy.Do get a surveyer who is not acting for the seller but for your and factor all this in the price. THEN (if you can) do the job yourself (with cheap help) using any spare cash for a long drying time for all the blisters. Fixing blisters in water-laden glass is a waste of time. Always finish with a barrier coat.ThanksJim W
Thought I had incorporated all this in Fiberglass Trilogy #3 (A&B). This was drawn together from all I have read, seen been told and done. You will see it in the Gelcoat and Plastics Forum. This includes the "bad years for blisters" myth.Now to specifics. ALL blisters start small and should be fixed BEFORE they become big. Big blisters have to be fixed with some structural strenght too (glass fiber if down into the laminate."Pox" in the barrier coat can just be sanded off and coated recoated with epoxy.Do get a surveyer who is not acting for the seller but for your and factor all this in the price. THEN (if you can) do the job yourself (with cheap help) using any spare cash for a long drying time for all the blisters. Fixing blisters in water-laden glass is a waste of time. Always finish with a barrier coat.ThanksJim W