oldlugs
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 7, 2006
- Messages
- 469
Hey gang, I'm wondering about which types of resins are best used to repair which hulls...
If I have a hull built with "vinylester" resin, should I only be using that same type of resin to repair with, or glass in a stuffing box? Would regular polyester resin work just as well on a vinylester hull? How about vinylester resin on a polyester hull?
I know I can use epoxy on either, but doesn't it work best on epoxy hulls?
The reason I'm asking, is 'cause I bought a used 20 size Microburst off eBay (supposedly in very good condition....) that had an electric motor mount poorly installed with CA and epoxy and some white goo...and some brown goo... The original composite stringers look decent, and I want to run it with a .21 in there, so out came all that old crap, leaving only the stringers. After lots of scraping, grinding and sanding, it'll be ready for for a new stuffing box. I'm guessing that even though it's an early Microburst, it may be vinylester/glass, and I want to recondition it with the best possible, most appropriate materials... Hard to be proud of an ugly boat; right?
Thanks for any advice (short of saying, "just buy a new hull"...).
Duane
If I have a hull built with "vinylester" resin, should I only be using that same type of resin to repair with, or glass in a stuffing box? Would regular polyester resin work just as well on a vinylester hull? How about vinylester resin on a polyester hull?
I know I can use epoxy on either, but doesn't it work best on epoxy hulls?
The reason I'm asking, is 'cause I bought a used 20 size Microburst off eBay (supposedly in very good condition....) that had an electric motor mount poorly installed with CA and epoxy and some white goo...and some brown goo... The original composite stringers look decent, and I want to run it with a .21 in there, so out came all that old crap, leaving only the stringers. After lots of scraping, grinding and sanding, it'll be ready for for a new stuffing box. I'm guessing that even though it's an early Microburst, it may be vinylester/glass, and I want to recondition it with the best possible, most appropriate materials... Hard to be proud of an ugly boat; right?
Thanks for any advice (short of saying, "just buy a new hull"...).
Duane