Worst Bottom Paint evah....

Jan 19, 2010
1,272
Catalina 34 Casco Bay
Thought I'd do my boat a good and try Interlux. 4 coats of barrier and 2 ablative.. Top ablative was/is their CF. I can tell you that the marine organisms LOVE it. Our water temps max around 64 degrees. I really can't imagine what warmer water down south would result in. I did reach out last year to Interlux... They offered all sorts or possibles. They shut down quickly upon learning that the bottom was completely stripped via media blasting and then barrier coated with THEIR product..

My best advice to all of you is to stay clear of Inetrlux CF. This not to say that their other paints are bad as well. Just CF
 
Mar 29, 2017
576
Hunter 30t 9805 littlecreek
Internet says its copper free. And there you go even pirate ships had copper cladding back in 1400 to reduce growth
 
Sep 25, 2008
7,342
Alden 50 Sarasota, Florida
While I have never used it, there are a lot of good reviews indicating people find it an effective anti-fouling.

It’s hard to judge one bad experience given that the efficacy of any ablative is directly related to how often the boat is used, where and local conditions.
 
Feb 26, 2011
1,440
Achilles SD-130 Alameda, CA
"Copper Free" essentially means "ineffective." I recently had the definite misfortune to clean a little 28' power cat that wears the Sea Hawk metal-free product, "Smart Solution." It's use is neither smart or a solution. For the foreseeable future, effective anti fouling paints require a biocide, IMHO.
 
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Mikem

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Dec 20, 2009
823
Hunter 466 Bremerton
I put the Intelux micron cf on my daughter's C-30. CF means co-polymer formula. We had a boat in the club that put Sea hawk on one half of the hull and the CF on the other half and hauled it a year later. The Sea Hawk was garbage and the CF was almost new looking. I had Sea Hawk on a H410 and a C-25...absolute failure. Hoping for much better results on the C-30 with the CF. I have copper on my boat and sleep well.
 

Joe

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Jun 1, 2004
8,164
Catalina 27 Mission Bay, San Diego
I use Interlux Bottom Kote….. it their low end hard shell product... legal copper content... price is right.... boat is in water year round. When combined with a logical maintenance program (i.e. diver) the you can easily go 3 to 4 years between service.
 
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Feb 26, 2011
1,440
Achilles SD-130 Alameda, CA
Looks like you got me. I didn’t make that up. I will look at the can and fine print
Oh, there's no doubt that Micron CF is a co-polymer paint. But that's not what the acronym means.
 
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Jan 19, 2010
1,272
Catalina 34 Casco Bay
Well we've got a good discussion going here... Years ago and several boats I used Pettit's Unepoxy Plus. It had something like 72% cuprous oxide. That worked very well. I had switched to West Marine's CCP. It was supposedly made by Pettit and about half the price...I've got a few months to explore the replacement paint options.
 
Sep 25, 2008
7,342
Alden 50 Sarasota, Florida
If we sift through the comments above and eliminate the opinion posts, we are left with 2 actual experiences - one claiming it is ineffective and the other claiming it works great “looking new”.

To review - one would need less opinions and more experience comments to make an informed judgment.
 
Jun 9, 2008
1,792
- -- -Bayfield
Bottom Kote is a single-season paint and works differently than ablative paints in that the toxicant leaches away from the paint while with an ablative paint, the toxicant and paint leach away at the same rate. Ablative paints work like a bar of soap, which as the bar gets smaller, the paint still does it's job until gone. When you take a cuprous oxide paint like Bottom Kote out of the water (say for winter storage), even though you may have enough paint on the bottom, there is a chemical change that takes place that renders the paint not as effective. If you leave the boat in the water for extended periods of time, as Joe and shemandr do, the paint works very well - but won't if they were to pull their boat and relaunch after the hull dries. Ablative paints can be pulled for winter storage - or whatever - and as long as their is paint you can expect protection expected based on which ablative paint you use. Folks in very tropical areas tend to use Pettit's Trinadad or Interlux' Ultra as they have the highest toxicant levels and work very well for extended periods of time where the boat remains in the water. There are a lot of reasons for paint failure besides the product itself. Not enough applications might be one. Anything that may contaminate the water where you keep your boat, such as industry, etc., might inhibit protection. Not using the boat doesn't do it any good as while the boat is underway, the action of the water sloughs the paint and toxicant away from the surface making it work. This is just a few examples of things I have learned based on my experience, selling and working with these products (and there are a lot more products to review). Good luck.