poly glo
I know there are people who swear by it, but personally I am swearing AT it. I inherited a Poly Glo job by the PO, a friend. When new, everyone in the marina was oooohing and ahhhhhhing the lovely shine. Now a few years later, after weather and sun, it has cracked , upbraided and yellowed terribly. My intention is to remove it, clean the hull with Colonite 920 and wax with Colonite 855 paste wax. The cleaner that Poly Glo sells will clean your virgin hull before application, but will not remove it. After a number of suggestions and home brews I found that the only recourse was to buy Poly Glo REMOVER, which is a bit pricey, but works. I tested it on the transom but winter descended so I didn't get a chance to finish it. I did find that the advertising is misleading. It leads one to believe that a can will do a 25' boat and it's sold in a 2-pack so that should do my 27' with some spare---wrong! You don't know until you receive it that it takes BOTH cans to do 25'. You must have a fresh water supply to rinse immediately and I'm a bit concerned with what the run-off will do to my VC-17 bottom paint. If it ever gets above zero here in the Mid West I'll find out.
One man's opinion!