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How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 11th, 2024, 7:22 pm
by Notsooowicked
Yes, this does sound crazy.
I just purchased a 396 a few months ago, and there are what appeared to be repair patches to the gel coat. Apon closer inspection, this looks like house paint. Any ideas on how I can remove house paint without further damaging my gel coat?
I am slowly discovering the ridiculousness of the way that the previous owner repaired some things on my boat. Luckily, he didn’t have it for very long, and the previous owners before him seemed to take very good care of her.
Any advice is welcome.
Thanks!!
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 11th, 2024, 7:47 pm
by bud37
Could you post a close up pic of this area ? What makes you think it is house paint?
If you google how to remove oil based paint etc there are many solvent suggestions, just try a small spot and see what happens.
But there has to be some repair under the paint that is being covered so it would be good to post a pic of this.
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 11th, 2024, 10:45 pm
by km1125
There are fiberglass-safe paint removers that you can use. I still have a gallon I bought over 20 years ago and just used some recently and the stuff still works great.
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 15th, 2024, 7:35 pm
by Notsooowicked
On the one photo, you can actually see the roller marks. And he did this in several different spots. But it looks like he painted the whole stern with house paint. I know repair products are notoriously hard to match, but this is acting just like house paint, and it looks like house paint.
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 22nd, 2024, 11:35 am
by paulr
I have an area on my 2001 396 that I purchased in 2021 that looks the same way. I had it compounded and waxed and its still a little ugly.
The fiberglass guy said it was some kind of superficial repair where the tech couldn't match the gel coat.
I have been familiar with with Carvers for 30 years. I've seen new boats where the factory released boats for sale with mismatched gelcoat certain areas that where from different molds.
I have seen many, many parts of Carvers where the aft deck small door and the side doors and the aft cabin aluminum structure, have a variation in color. I have never seen that on other boats.
I would really like to hear from another fiberglass expert if they are familiar with Carvers.
If you find that your boat does have house paint on it has to be covering something else but probably not serious or the surveyor would have found it.
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 22nd, 2024, 12:01 pm
by Viper
paulr wrote:Source of the post.... I have seen many, many parts of Carvers where the aft deck small door and the side doors and the aft cabin aluminum structure, have a variation in color......
That's really common because a lot of the components you mentioned including radar arches, are typically aluminum on some models and thus are painted, not fiberglass, and so you will always get a colour variation between the gel and painted surfaces over time. There are variables that affect how different coatings and their original look hold up over time. That applies to all brands using this form of construction.
For the blotching in the original post, I would try wet sanding an inconspicuous area then polish it out to see if that improves it. The idea is to get down to the original gelcoat, you just have to be careful not to sand aggressively so you don't go through the gelcoat. If you've never done this with a power sander, do a small area by hand first to see if the process solves the problem. If it does you may want to consult a pro to do the rest.
Re: How to get house paint off gel coat?
Posted: December 22nd, 2024, 7:49 pm
by bud37
Notsooowicked wrote:Source of the post On the one photo, you can actually see the roller marks. And he did this in several different spots. But it looks like he painted the whole stern with house paint. I know repair products are notoriously hard to match, but this is acting just like house paint, and it looks like house paint.
Is this on the non skid deck sections ??
Smooth Gelcoat on the hull sides etc is quite thin and can be burnt thru with simply rubbing compound and a power buffer in spots if not experienced, remember it is the protection for the glass fibres underneath.