bottom blasting help
Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 73
- Joined: Jul 13th, '06, 16:29
- Location: Lake Michigan- Grand Haven
- Contact:
bottom blasting help
Well faithful- the 28 is back together- floating and running charters- I am getting ready to shift gears and start my 25b-- hardtop-- I am planning on going with a backet and single 225 Merc which I have already purchased both the bracket and outboard. I was looking at my bottom and want to do this boat 'right' the first time. I am planning on blasting the bottom and then filling any voids with epoxy before barrier coating and putting on VC- Any input as to what kind of media to use when blasting the bottom? I am planning on taking it easy on the bottom( I will be blasting it myself with a small pot blaster) Also- what filler to mix with the epoxy to fill voids( I get my materials from Fiberglass coatings)
Thanks in advance
Capt dana
Thanks in advance
Capt dana
Dana Bonney
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
Dana,I will be blasting it myself with a small pot blaster
Blasting the bottom of a boat can be a real task with a small media blast rig & especially without a media recovery system... Are you going to be doing this in a boatyard or on your own property?
Soda blasting, (wet), takes a special, more sophisticated, & costly rig. Best media, both from a gentle & cost stand point, for a dry rig is crushed walnut shell. But you need to be able capture & re-use the media, or you'll go through a massive amount of material if it only goes out the nozzle once.
You'll need to spread a large clean catchment of some kind under & around the boat. My 60 lb capacity blaster will only hold about 35 lbs of walnut shell because of the light weight per cu/ft of the material. You'll go through that volume in a very short time -- minutes... The thickest black visquine available would probably be my choice for a catchment. This is my reason for asking about where you'll be doing the work. Walking around on plastic sheeting laid out over the standard boatyard gravel is going to turn it into a sieve. Over grass or dirt, it'd be OK with soft soled shoes or with just heavy socks on.
You'll also be eating up a lot of compressed air real quick, so you'll need a high delivery compressor to keep up.
Open media blasting needs to be done with proper body cover. The bounce-back will be strong enough to sand down bare skin. A full head shield & heavy gloves are a must.
Br,
Patrick
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 907
- Joined: Jan 3rd, '07, 00:28
- Location: Lindenhurst, NY
- Contact:
I just went thru trying the soda/pressure washer rig and it works a little. Sandblasting works but is grueling. I found the easiest is to use good stripper[not biofriendly] and let it sit then pressure wash. It will take 3 times but by the third time its all gone. 3500lb pressure washer. Much less a pain than sandplasting. Troy 31Tiara"DRIFTER"
Kill Em All ......Let God Sort Em Out
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 73
- Joined: Jul 13th, '06, 16:29
- Location: Lake Michigan- Grand Haven
- Contact:
more info
I will be doing this at my friends place-( he has 6 projects in his yard) We were planning on tarping off and using visqueen on the ground(grass--soft) to help recover the media- Where is the best source for the walnut shells?
THanks
Dana
THanks
Dana
Dana Bonney
-
- Senior Member
- Posts: 73
- Joined: Jul 13th, '06, 16:29
- Location: Lake Michigan- Grand Haven
- Contact:
how many lbs of walnut shells?
Also- It appears that my bottom is not layered with a ton of paint---about how many lbs of walnut shells will I need for the 25 bottom?
Thanks
Thanks
Dana Bonney
i did about a third of mine (just the bow area)with four im guessing 60 pound bags of shells. recapturing them is not easy. a friend did something interesting ...he used fine sand at low pressure and kinda peeled the paint off instead of blasting the shit out of it....im about to blast 40 years of grime off the inside of the engine hatch covers........and the lawn furniture at the same time.
- CaptPatrick
- Founder/Admin
- Posts: 4161
- Joined: Jun 7th, '06, 14:25
- Location: 834 Scott Dr., LLANO, TX 78643 - 325.248.0809 bertram31@bertram31.com
Dana,Where is the best source for the walnut shells?
Best I've found is Harbor Freight $1.00 per lb + shipping... I'd get 100 lbs.
Br,
Patrick
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 268 guests