This fall I plan on hauling my boat and painting(awlgrip possibly) or spraying gelcoat on the deck of my boat. Awlgrip has great how-to videos. Though it looks to be on the upper end on the difficulty scale.
I watched a video on gelcoat repair. It said "sand and buff if necessary". It was on repairs though and how to match gelcoat, which seems to be an art/witchcraft in it's self to get it right. I haven't seen a video yet on how to gelcoat an entire boat or a section where you don't care about blending or matching colors. The sanding and buffing are always necessary to blend together the old with the new repaired section.
If I am spraying a whole section where there is no blending or matching, Can I spray the gelcoat and not touch it after that and have a nice super slick looking surface? Or is buffing and polishing ALWAYS steps to a pro looking gelcoat job?
The reason why I am asking now and not when I do the job is I want to start practicing in my shop spraying whatever I am going to use so when I do my boat it's not, and more importantly, doesn't look like the first time I applied the finish/gelcoat.
I watched a video on gelcoat repair. It said "sand and buff if necessary". It was on repairs though and how to match gelcoat, which seems to be an art/witchcraft in it's self to get it right. I haven't seen a video yet on how to gelcoat an entire boat or a section where you don't care about blending or matching colors. The sanding and buffing are always necessary to blend together the old with the new repaired section.
If I am spraying a whole section where there is no blending or matching, Can I spray the gelcoat and not touch it after that and have a nice super slick looking surface? Or is buffing and polishing ALWAYS steps to a pro looking gelcoat job?
The reason why I am asking now and not when I do the job is I want to start practicing in my shop spraying whatever I am going to use so when I do my boat it's not, and more importantly, doesn't look like the first time I applied the finish/gelcoat.