Also if they keep the boat in the water the need to do a good bottom paint from the water line down. Otherwise the hull will overtime absorb water and start cracking on the gelcoat. That's how it is here for me in a freshwater situation.
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Also if they keep the boat in the water the need to do a good bottom paint from the water line down. Otherwise the hull will overtime absorb water and start cracking on the gelcoat. That's how it is here for me in a freshwater situation.
Also I use orange css pads on my da for heavy oxidation and a pink css for well maintained cleaner boats. As for pricing the local standard here is 12 dollars a foot for the hull and 6 a foot for the top side just polishing and wax or sealant. That's for your typical 36ft or smaller boats. Anything with a fly bridge or much larger top side is priced on a per job basis.
I'm no expert on detailing just a hobby mostly and some side work but I've never walked away from a boat that the owner wasn't very impressed by my work.
Thanks Trutech,
AutoGeek took a long, long time shipping my items for some reason (and some still have not arrived -- back-ordered now), so by the time the order arrived that client was long gone. It ended up costing us in the end, we explained our newest shipment had not arrived as expected.
I also called and spoke directly with whomever answers the phone at Menzerna, and they told me my 1500 would work perfectly on the white clear coat. Well, it didn't... and actually ended up staining the clear coat since their product is black. That took a while to remove.
Really odd and uncharacteristically bad service from both organizations in total.
see post 13;
Unfortunately my order didn't even ship for nearly a week after I placed it, let alone arrive... so although I ordered some of AG's Marine 31 products (I couldn't find AquaBuff on AG's site), I was left with what I had on hand, which Menzerna assured me would be perfectly fine.
no sir, the black pigment is not the best or ideal product.
gel is full of microscopic pinholes called porosity. always try and stay with white polishes/compounds where possible.
Aquabuff is readily available, but agreed, not on AG.
do yourself a favour, if youre going to be getting into boats, and if you only take one piece of advice from me, aquabuff and a rotary are the way to do a boat.
Tell Menzerna that :(
I actually questioned their advice on the phone, right from the client's driveway... it was kind of awkward, and the person who answered the phone at Menzerna seemed a little perturbed and rude. That's alright though, there are PLENTY of other options out there for my next order, I don't have to stay with a company that doles out incorrect advice and costs businesses money and time.
when i worked in the boat building industry, we moved away from Megs #4 (i think thats what it was) because it was a beige colour compound, and the polish, was a browner colour. it was a bugger to get out of the porosity. when we made the move to aquabuff it was unreal the difference, and the less cleanup we had was great.
i may have said it somewhere else before, but we were building million plus dollar yachts (Neptunus) so anyone should be happy with the products we were using at the factory.
The closest comparison, (again not on AG as of yet) is the Scholl concepts line of marine polishes and compounds. someone has got to get the ear of a purchaser and expand the scholl line, and heck, even bring in the Aqua Buff.
http://www.autogeekonline.net/forum/...coat-boat.html
most likely this is what you are looking at...15 guys for 4 hours...wait ... it's a white boat...maybe you can do it on 50 hours :) ... Mike has boating forum...I am sure...marine 31 forum has more answers...