Go with Collinite cleaner wax, get it at the binnacle, one coat every year
if the gel coat is good now…that is your best bet

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dr. Mark
Bodnar
Sent: April 3, 2014 1:15 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Poli-Glow

 


Seems this topic raises some divergent opinions.

I'm pretty sure my CS 30 is just original gel coat - so I was planning on
starting some type of hull upkeep.
The polyglow positives sound really sweet - fast and easy is all good to me!
Boat will be hauled every year, so easy to re-do yearly.

Certainly don't have any interest in compounding the boat every year.  I'm
more function than fashion - so as long as the hull is protected I'm not
going to sweat to make it look pretty.

On the other hand - Turtle Wax is not all that challenging either.

>From what I've seen back and forth so far it's unlikely I'll have a
definitive answer - but I'm tempted to try to PolyGlow route.

Mark



---------------------
  Dr. Mark Bodnar
B.Sc., D.C., FCCOPR(C)
Bedford Chiropractic
---------------------
 
There is no cure for birth and death save to enjoy the interval.
  - George Santayana

On 03/04/2014 12:59 AM, Rick Brass wrote:

Poly-Glow is essentially acrylic floor wax. If you try to sand without
stripping the Poly-Glow first, you end up with the sandpaper gummed up with
the acrylic. 

 

Nothing wrong wit the chemistry or with the gel coat. Just inexperienced
"professionals".

 

I've used Poly-Glow on my 25 since the mid 90s and never have stripped it
with the exception of one spot repair where a dirty fender ground
dirt/mildew/green junk off a piling into the surface during a nor'easter one
winter. Poly-prep is dilute ammonium hydroxide. I used concentrated ammonium
hydroxide (Purple Power from Walmart at $3 per gallon), rinsed, cleaned the
section of hull, recoated wit Poly-Glow. Good as new in under a day.

 

Annual polish is to wash the hull and rinse well with fresh water, and apply
a couple of new coats of Poly-Glow, as someone has already said. Takes a
couple of hours. Would be easier if the boat got hauled more often than once
every 3 or 4 years.

 

I wish my 38 had never been painted. A shiny hull would be so much easier.

 

Rick Brass

Sent from my iPad


On Apr 2, 2014, at 14:04, Andy Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:

I don't believe in the quit fix like Poli-Glow, I was a believer at one time
until I had to do some repairs on my boat after a collision. It was an
insurance job so I was looking at having the repairs done by a professional.
When they started to sand down the the damage area the sand- paper was
gumming and they didn't understand why. I told them that I used Poli-Glow
and they think that it could have been a chemical reaction that caused that
or the original  gel coat never cure properly. No paint would aver stick on
the boat in the condition it was in and it turn out the only next option was
to re-gel coat the boat.     

 

 We have old Antique boats that oxidize with time and one day or another you
will need to re-paint your boat.

 

Andy

 

C&C 25-1


  _____  


From: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 2 Apr 2014 11:40:20 -0500
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Poli-Glow

Which why I chose to paint Touché with Awlcraft rather than Awlgrip.
Awlcraft can be more easily repaired and blended than Awlgrip. Although it
can be done, painters that can successfully blend Awlgrip are rare. 

 

Dennis C.

Touché 35-1 #83

Mandeville, LA

Sent from my iPhone


On Apr 2, 2014, at 9:10 AM, David Knecht <[email protected]> wrote:

What is the “it” that will deteriorate- the Awlgrip or the Poli-glow.
Either way, I am not sure what to do this spring. I can either strip the
Poli-glow and use Awlcare or keep using Poli-glow.  Added to this is the
fact that the Awlgrip got badly scratched/scuffed by an unpadded dock last
fall (long story).  It appears that with Awlgrip, there is nothing you can
do except repaint and I am not ready to add that to my boat budget this
year.  All of this makes me less than enthused by my first Awlgrip
experience.  Dave 

 

On Apr 2, 2014, at 10:00 AM, dwight <[email protected]> wrote:

 

Because it will deteriorate in time and you will have to do it over.  With
Awlgrip all you really need to do is wash it down well and then if you want
a little more do 1 coat of Awlcare, which is really easy to apply as
well…should least 20+years at least barring scratches and dings 

 


  _____  


From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Knecht
Sent: April 2, 2014 10:57 AM
To: CnC CnC discussion list
Subject: Re: Stus-List Poli-Glow

 

Not realizing that my new boat had Awlgrip, I put Poli-glow on it last
spring before launching.  It looked great (as usual) so I have no idea why
it is “not recommended”.  Dave

 

 



David Knecht

Aries

1990 C&C 34+

New London, CT


<image001.jpg>

 

_______________________________________________
This List is provided by the C&C Photo Album
http://www.cncphotoalbum.com
[email protected]

 



David Knecht, Ph.D.    



Professor and Head of Core Microscopy Facility

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology

U-3125

91 N. Eagleville Rd.

University of Connecticut

Storrs, CT 06269

860-486-2200

860-486-4331 (fax)





 

 

 

 



David Knecht

Aries

1990 C&C 34+

New London, CT


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[email protected]


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