So I have finished the 3 coats of epoxy. Like most of these tasks, I got much better towards the end. It endedup fairly bumpy, and when I tried to sand it down I got down to the glass in places. In hind sight I should have put another coat of epoxy on and tried to get it smoother. To be fair I thought I had it fairly smooth, but as painting would later show I was miles off.
Paint, so I settled on a sandable two part epoxy undercoat. This product comes from Altex Paints. I watched thier instructional video on applying it and so recruited my brother to give me a hand. So he took the job of rolling it on, and I was doing the tipping off. What we discovered fairly quickly was it was hard to get a thick even layer. But as we progressed we got better at it, and by the end it was going on well, but the start was terrible.
The paint was a two part epoxy, and by the time we got to the end we had only used half, but had mixed the whole tin. This is despite the fact that a single tim should have only covered about 2/3rd at most of the boat, so it was obviously on way to thin.
So I did some more thinking and the following weekend applied a second coat, just by roller only, and this time I got the whole tin on. From there it was sanding, and this is where I really discovered the bottom wasn't nearly as smooth as I thought. After sanding in some places i was back down to the epoxy, and so have had to apply a third coat, hopefully this will be the last.
The pink is a guide coat I put on to aid in sanding, its just some old enamel paint mixture with a lot of thinners to make a very runny paint.
I have also purchased some "Pacific Teal" as the final
bottom coat.
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