- Joined
- Apr 14, 2006
- RO Number
- 20854
- Messages
- 1,192
So there's a few hairline cracks on my boat that I'd like to fix. They are not on the main hull or top deck structure so they are not anything that concern me a lot, and they are in spots where I'm probably the only one who sees them (there's one in the dash area under the windshield coming from a screw for the sliding door track, one in one of the cockpit livewell access hatch panels, coming from one of the screws that holds the latch in place etc.) I got an estimate from a professional, and it's ridiculous. He pretty much estimates 4-8 hours per little hairline crack a $100/hr.
Which leads me to, I'm gonna have to do these myself. I did a couple a few years back on my other boat and got mediocre results. The main problem of all was the gelcoat mixture from the kit I bought at west marine. It was transparent and the color was added, and I must not have added enough as the "fix" seems to not have enough white on it.
I contacted Tiara, and they can sell me a quart of gelcoat for like $160, but they said it doesn't keep well and I'm likely to need MUCH LESS than that.
So I'm thinking, considering the locations of these little cracks, if I can find a decent kit that has a white gelcoat, it'll probably come out good enough. Plan B would be to maybe just use MarineTex, but I'm not sure how that would look.
Any suggestions?
Also, any additional ideas as to equipment to have which might make the job easier are welcome.
Which leads me to, I'm gonna have to do these myself. I did a couple a few years back on my other boat and got mediocre results. The main problem of all was the gelcoat mixture from the kit I bought at west marine. It was transparent and the color was added, and I must not have added enough as the "fix" seems to not have enough white on it.
I contacted Tiara, and they can sell me a quart of gelcoat for like $160, but they said it doesn't keep well and I'm likely to need MUCH LESS than that.
So I'm thinking, considering the locations of these little cracks, if I can find a decent kit that has a white gelcoat, it'll probably come out good enough. Plan B would be to maybe just use MarineTex, but I'm not sure how that would look.
Any suggestions?
Also, any additional ideas as to equipment to have which might make the job easier are welcome.