does anybody know what work best to remove oxidation and old water lines? My entire boat needs it done bad.
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does anybody know what work best to remove oxidation and old water lines? My entire boat needs it done bad.
The only way to remove oxidation is to grind off enough gel coat to get down to unaffected gel. If the gel is oxidized badly enough, you'll grind off all the gel, leaving a fairly rough surface on the boat. Go slowly and try a buffer with a fine polishing compound on a small area to see how it goes. I'd check in the boat restoration forum on Bass Boat Central at Bassboat Restoration: BBC Boards for the best advice.
forgot to mention that my boat is a 17ft aluminum grumman so no paint to worry about.
here is a link to an article from scrapper, it is excellent advise on restoring a glass boat. i followed his directions mostly with a few changes that i took but it did and excellent job for me. it really added life back to my old red glass boat:)
http://www.crappie.com/crappie/main-...storation.html
I have a painted alum. jon. I used foaming tile & shower cleaner on both my boat & trailer. They turned out good.
Gary
i seen on another site muriatic acid will work good be careful of the fumes maybe wear a respirator
I've used WD40 before on my painted aluminum boat with fair results....
wd is awsome... but it ony lasts till it gets dried out again... makes a big difference in the paint till then...
it also works on car paint.. have a 2001 mack truck.. the red paint was looking more like pink... i worked it over real good with wd and then washed it with dawn dish soap.. then waxed it... it has stayed red till this day..looks good.
I use White Lightning. U can buy it at Napa Auto parts. It is a alluminum cleaner like what u use to clean car rims.Mix it 50/50 . Wet the boat with water, spray with cleaner let it soak about 3 min it will foam up. just rinse off. you want believe it.Some stains might take a couple of repeats to remove .It is the easyest to use .I have never had it mess up any paint or decals . But dont let it dry on the alluminum it will spot it. If ithat happens reclean. It is sold by the gallon about $13.00 I think . that is enough to do you bot about 3 times.
Went to our NAPA store and they had the aluminum cleaner under a different name. It's good that I cut it like you said and followed their directions except for using it in the sun. I had to hit some areas a couple extra times but it sure made it look better. The guy who owned the boat before me had used the cleaner and it turned it white but that looks better than the black. Now to get some polish and a buffer. Thanks for your input on this thread. Saved me some bucks. Ferdi aka Fred
bass pro, toon brite, then mothers polish, showroom shine
I sure wish I had not started the buffing and waxing. What a mess and to hard on me to do this job. My back gave out before I got half of one log done. I have some of the acid left so I am going to turn it white and leave it like that. When my Rich Uncle gets out of the poor house I'll hit him up for a loan to have it properly detailed. Ferdi aka Fred
There is some stuff called Clay Bar Wash made by turtle wax Ice we used it on our painted aluminum boat and it took off all the water lines and oxidation just follow the directions on the bottle, you will need to use some wax after. We use turtle wax express spray and wax it. Easier than the traditional wax.
I have 30 yrs. exsp. in the processing area of Rockwell Int. where we cleaned and polished Alum. Muriatic Acid is one way. Be sure and wear rubber gloves, respirator, and goggles. Most of the methods used to clean a alum. boat that are talked about in this thread are also good.