what_barnacles
Guru
Having steel as a backing material to heat off polymers is one thing, I am NOT going to try that with gelcoat and fiberglass!
You may have missed the part about the car being a FIBERGLASS corvette.
Having steel as a backing material to heat off polymers is one thing, I am NOT going to try that with gelcoat and fiberglass!
You may have missed the part about the car being a FIBERGLASS corvette.
Aaaaaaannnnddd... You would be correct. ;-) Still ain't gonna try it though... Well, maybe in a very hidden spot... On someone else's boat. :-D
I have a hard time believing someone would use floor polish (made for indoor tile or vinyl flooring) on the exterior gelcoat of a boat.
"The only product I will ever use on fiberglass is one from the Collinite Auto, Marine and Industrial Wax Products Official Site » Collinite range of products the fiberglass wax is fantastic."
This is some good stuff if you haven't tried it.
On a friend's recommendation, to eliminate the yellow stain, after using toilet bowl cleaner to get the white back, I applied Mop-n-glow. What a disaster! that was about 15 years ago. There are still places where the stuff just wont go away, now dull and grey. Elsewhere, I have had great success with Colinite Boat Cleaner and wax. I used it on the house, where your eye gets much closer, so the finish has to look better, about 5 years ago, and it still looks good. Having the boat in a shelter is key.
Not hard at all $1500+ (for big boat) to pay someone, verses $40 - $50 to do it yourself with a product that claims that "you can do it"................
$50 of floor wax will shine a fllet of boats.
Once the boat is shiny via compounding, wet sanding, or merely needing Finesse-It: Rejex, I'm telling you boys, Rejex. Proven by years of east coast salt water cruising then years in the tannin-rich waters of eastern North Carolina.
Once the boat is shiny via compounding, wet sanding, or merely needing Finesse-It: Rejex, I'm telling you boys, Rejex. Proven by years of east coast salt water cruising then years in the tannin-rich waters of eastern North Carolina.
Having steel as a backing material to heat off polymers is one thing, I am NOT going to try that with gelcoat and fiberglass!
I used that stuff on my RV specifically the front cab-over and it was an OK product. After taking a beating in the rain it was like any other wax, it washed off.......
My experiment here is just on the black strip and if it doesn't work, so be it. I will report the results here after a year of use. Right now it looks really good.
I'm with you, Al. Once upon a time when I first bought her, I actually thought I would polish my boat...ha!
Life's too short, besides, I'm kinda fond of the patina now.
It is good but seemed hard to get the wax off when I used it. Maybe I was doing it wrong.
If you were using their paste wax you may have been.
Unlike most waxes you need to buff off Collinite paste wax before it fully drys to dust or its a PITA to wipe/buff off.
I stopped using true waxes a long time ago. There are just to many good polymer sealants out now that do everything better than wax.
Rejex is one of them.
Zaino and Sea Shield are a couple others.
I like multible coats of Zaino. Which is very easy to apply. And Sae Shield exhaust guard. Both are very good if you have a soot issue on or around your transom. The soot comes off with plain boat soap in most cases.
And it's much easier to clean off the black streaks you get after a rain in many areas as wells. The streaks don't cling to the polymers they way they do to a true wax finish.
The same holds true for Rejex. I just haven't used it as much.
Any of these works best and last longest if the surface is prepared properly before hand of course. Clean and smooth is the key to get the best results. Just as it is with a wax finish.