JWellington
Guru
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2021
- Messages
- 655
Maybe a lot of people don’t like the way it looks??? I don’t want my pleasure boat looking like that.
No problem, $25k or more every few years.
Maybe a lot of people don’t like the way it looks??? I don’t want my pleasure boat looking like that.
Wonder if heavy duty aluminum cooking foil would work Maybe Mr. Wellington, unpainted aluminum enthusiast, knows a good source in wide sheet form. Shiny or dull side out?
No problem, $25k or more every few years.
No, here a good paint job will go 15+ years.
Earlier this year I had my concrete/stucco house painted in prep to sell. Prep was power wash and caulking in some areas. 1500 sf main house, 1000 sf in law suite, a 500 sf standalone office, and about 150 feet of 6 foot high wall. Was about $9k usd. Prep and materials were a fraction of the work to paint my 36 foot boat which was $25k in Mexico.I gathered that but still seems a lot of coin.
Out of interest, what does a timber house cost to paint?
Earlier this year I had my concrete/stucco house painted in prep to sell. Prep was power wash and caulking in some areas. 1500 sf main house, 1000 sf in law suite, a 500 sf standalone office, and about 150 feet of 6 foot high wall. Was about $9k usd. Prep and materials were a fraction of the work to paint my 36 foot boat which was $25k in Mexico.
Apples and oranges
Peter
As we watch you chip and sand and paint all that rust.........continually.
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Apples and oranges
Peter
I had a lot of fiberglass repairs. 50 year old boat had many old instrument holes I had filled. Some gelcoat repair meaning hi-build primer and lots of sanding. All ports and hardware were removed. Caprails were encapsulated in glass and sprayed. In the car world, would be equivalent of a frame-off paint job.wow Peter that's a lot of pesos. i guess Ensenada is not what it used to be.
I've seen many commercial fishing boats done like this. They look fine from a distance.I guess my point is, at least on a timber boat is that the guy doing the sanding and painting on a timber house is just as capable of doing the sanding and painting on a timber boat
Same same but different, without the boat premium price
I did my apprenticeship building aluminium superyachts so know full well the difference between paintjobsI've seen many commercial fishing boats done like this. They look fine from a distance.
Even in house painting there are different levels of finish and prep. Some houses have a lot of trim work, others don't. If you're okay with heavily textured surfaces that hide all sorts of imperfections you can get away cheap. Want a smooth finish that shows any sag or overspray? Gets expensive quickly.
Not a "boat premium." It's a quality premium - get what you pay for. But please, don't equate the two efforts as equal except for cost. You may not see the value of spending extra, but that doesn't make the outcomes comparable.
Peter
Do you even understand that fiberglass boats do not rust? This thread isn’t about your love for aluminum boats but rather about how much it costs to paint a boat, maybe stick to that???
I painted the hull on our 57' aluminum trawler this year using the roll and tip method after doing most of the topsides the year before. It was a big learning curve to get the paint and procedure to a point that it would look good close up. I was painting over Awlgrip and Awlcraft that was done 20 years ago, it had lost a lot of its shine and was faded quite a bit. I used Endura which is a 2 part polyurethane paint that will not fade and is extremely hard once cured. Its a widely used paint in the oil patch that stands up to the very harsh conditions on the industrial machinery used in this industry. It is easy to match colours and I did so using the Awlgrip colour numbers used on the previous paint job. Prep is very important! Also when rolling and tipping temperature and brush quality, thinning etc are a learned process.
As well I had to use a boathouse to control the weather etc.
I'm very curious where they are going to paint your boat, are you having it transported to a boat yard? I'm in Ladysmith and one of the reasons I decided to do this myself was the lack of places to have this done properly....outside of phillbrooks which would be beyond my budget. 20 years ago entire boat was sandblasted, faired, and Awlgrip top to bottom for 155,000.00 at Fraser Fibreglass in North Van.
My covid project last year was to paint our 42' sundeck motor yacht's topsides. Used Alexseal - great support from them. Removed hardware, ground out many, many spider cracks, and a few other dings, faired and sanded. Used their primer also. White paint over white gelcoat. Rolled with 4", 1/8" nap rollers. Turned out great, but was a lot of work. Just kept reminding myself I was saving around $40,000 - our topside has a lot of territory. Was in a covered slip with no boats on either side.