Jim Spence
Senior Member
- Joined
- Oct 6, 2007
- Messages
- 180
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Sea Eagle
- Vessel Make
- Californian 50' Cockpit M/V
I recently finished painting my boat with Awlgrip and thought I would share some infromation with the forum.
I painted the house, all decks, gunnels, swim platform*and a stripe on the hull between the caprail and the rub rail. The project took 7 months. I went through 3 painters before I got one that really knew what he was doing. All work was done by myself and the painter with an ocassional friend or son helping to sand. (ran out of friends and kids quickly).
The paint, with the exception of the inside of the flybridge was rolled and tipped. Everyone that sees the boat thinks the whole thing was sprayed. The boat was painted in the slip at my marina, except for the stripe and the swim platform*that was painted when the boat was hauled to do the bottom. The inside of the flybridge was turned into a paintbooth and sprayed with Awlcraft 2000. The rest of the boat was painted with Awlgrip #1 (the origional Awlgrip). The decks were painted with the same material, but a different color.
My decks were paint over an origional sprayed gelcoat texture. Needless to say they were peeling. The decks had to be ground down and faired. This was the messiest and most time consuming part of the job.
The house was painted Matterhorn White. Awlgrip paints have a tremendous amount of clear in them, that is why they look so shiny. But*the white paints do not cover very well.* My boat had been painted sometime in the past and had been primed with grey primer. Even though everything was sanded and primed with white primer you would still end up sanding through to the grey. It will take 3 coats of the white to keep the grey from bleeding through.
A few observations from my project:
Rolling and tiping can be learned in a couple of hours.
Mix your paint or primer at least 1 hour before you will be painting
Final sanding before painting is with 400 grit, using a random orbital sander. Look closely at your work it must be perfectly smooth to look good.
The key to using Awlgrip is chemistry.
The Awlgrip system consists of 4 things. The paint, converter, reducer. (used brushing reducer) and acellerator.
Because I'm in central Florida and its winter we were constantly adjusting the paint. Because the days were getting short we had to use acellerator. Unacellerated Awlgrip will take about 16 hours to dry at 70 degrees. If dew hits the paint before it dries it will blush and have to be repainted. If it rains before it dries your screwed. (the paint craters and is a real PITA to sand because it is so hard.)* The basic mixture is 2 to 1 paint to converter. 33% brushing reducer (by volume) and 2 to 4 DROPS of acellerator for approx 1/2 gallon of mixed paint.* The amount of acellerator will change depending on temperature. Cooler temps. require more acellerator etc.
We would start painting, if the brush was dragging during the tip, 1 capfull of reducer*was added untill the brush would go smoothly.
Another point, my window frames were black. I painted them white due to the amount of heat the black absorbs here in Florida. I am looking forward to less window problems in the future.
Painting the decks was done as follows:
Mix the paint as usual but ad additional acellerator. Roll approximatly 10 sq ft. Using a cup spray gun spray Awlgrip non skid on the wet paint. Continue
doing one area at a time until* all the deck you are doing is done. When finished, keep checking paint untill it is pretty well set up. (won't take a finger print with pressure) Roll a second coat of paint on top of first coat. (Note: if you don't wait long enough the non skid will pick up). On the second coat because of the cool temps and late time of day (2pm) we added about 10 drops of acellerator to about a quart of paint.
Because of the dew here we would spend an hour to an hour and a half drying the boat every morning. Awlgrip cannot be painted on a surface with any moisture. Always wipe the surface you are painting with denatured alcohol.* Always tack rag before painting. Awlgrip stops drying if the temp drops below 60, so we had to keep track of what overnight temps would be and adjust the paint accordingly or not paint on that day.
I hope this helps anyone thinking of taking on this project. I think I have hit the main issues. One other point I'll make is that I had 2 estimates. One was $68,000 the other was $70,000. Both required the boat to be in dry dock, with no estimate of how long. I live on my boat and would have had to move to land. The yard would also have charged me for yard space. ( the closest yard would have been $25 per day.) The job cost me about 1/2 of that including paying the painters hourly rate and materials. Materials costs was about $2300.
Total cost including New stainless for the rub rail and Aluminum around house top was $33,000.
I painted the house, all decks, gunnels, swim platform*and a stripe on the hull between the caprail and the rub rail. The project took 7 months. I went through 3 painters before I got one that really knew what he was doing. All work was done by myself and the painter with an ocassional friend or son helping to sand. (ran out of friends and kids quickly).
The paint, with the exception of the inside of the flybridge was rolled and tipped. Everyone that sees the boat thinks the whole thing was sprayed. The boat was painted in the slip at my marina, except for the stripe and the swim platform*that was painted when the boat was hauled to do the bottom. The inside of the flybridge was turned into a paintbooth and sprayed with Awlcraft 2000. The rest of the boat was painted with Awlgrip #1 (the origional Awlgrip). The decks were painted with the same material, but a different color.
My decks were paint over an origional sprayed gelcoat texture. Needless to say they were peeling. The decks had to be ground down and faired. This was the messiest and most time consuming part of the job.
The house was painted Matterhorn White. Awlgrip paints have a tremendous amount of clear in them, that is why they look so shiny. But*the white paints do not cover very well.* My boat had been painted sometime in the past and had been primed with grey primer. Even though everything was sanded and primed with white primer you would still end up sanding through to the grey. It will take 3 coats of the white to keep the grey from bleeding through.
A few observations from my project:
Rolling and tiping can be learned in a couple of hours.
Mix your paint or primer at least 1 hour before you will be painting
Final sanding before painting is with 400 grit, using a random orbital sander. Look closely at your work it must be perfectly smooth to look good.
The key to using Awlgrip is chemistry.
The Awlgrip system consists of 4 things. The paint, converter, reducer. (used brushing reducer) and acellerator.
Because I'm in central Florida and its winter we were constantly adjusting the paint. Because the days were getting short we had to use acellerator. Unacellerated Awlgrip will take about 16 hours to dry at 70 degrees. If dew hits the paint before it dries it will blush and have to be repainted. If it rains before it dries your screwed. (the paint craters and is a real PITA to sand because it is so hard.)* The basic mixture is 2 to 1 paint to converter. 33% brushing reducer (by volume) and 2 to 4 DROPS of acellerator for approx 1/2 gallon of mixed paint.* The amount of acellerator will change depending on temperature. Cooler temps. require more acellerator etc.
We would start painting, if the brush was dragging during the tip, 1 capfull of reducer*was added untill the brush would go smoothly.
Another point, my window frames were black. I painted them white due to the amount of heat the black absorbs here in Florida. I am looking forward to less window problems in the future.
Painting the decks was done as follows:
Mix the paint as usual but ad additional acellerator. Roll approximatly 10 sq ft. Using a cup spray gun spray Awlgrip non skid on the wet paint. Continue
doing one area at a time until* all the deck you are doing is done. When finished, keep checking paint untill it is pretty well set up. (won't take a finger print with pressure) Roll a second coat of paint on top of first coat. (Note: if you don't wait long enough the non skid will pick up). On the second coat because of the cool temps and late time of day (2pm) we added about 10 drops of acellerator to about a quart of paint.
Because of the dew here we would spend an hour to an hour and a half drying the boat every morning. Awlgrip cannot be painted on a surface with any moisture. Always wipe the surface you are painting with denatured alcohol.* Always tack rag before painting. Awlgrip stops drying if the temp drops below 60, so we had to keep track of what overnight temps would be and adjust the paint accordingly or not paint on that day.
I hope this helps anyone thinking of taking on this project. I think I have hit the main issues. One other point I'll make is that I had 2 estimates. One was $68,000 the other was $70,000. Both required the boat to be in dry dock, with no estimate of how long. I live on my boat and would have had to move to land. The yard would also have charged me for yard space. ( the closest yard would have been $25 per day.) The job cost me about 1/2 of that including paying the painters hourly rate and materials. Materials costs was about $2300.
Total cost including New stainless for the rub rail and Aluminum around house top was $33,000.