I have PPF on my boat and I love it. It takes care of the problem once and for all. I put some on two years ago and just last week I ripped it off and replaced it with two foot wide stuff verses the one foot wide. And it came off with ease, another concern. No goof off or heating. When I inquired about it on Tugnuts two years ago, no one had tried it so I just forged ahead. One person thought or cautioned that maybe the hull would not fade equally like when you rip off a sticker. I was concerned too, but last week confirmed that’s not a problem. At LEAST not here in fresh water with intermitted salt water and docked under cover for five months and stored over the winter months. Either way it still gets lots of UV light bouncing around. And it’s a red hull.
Application; they recommend using 12 drops of baby shampoo to a pint sprayer bottle of water. I learned that you can NOT have too much water on both the boat and the PPF. It will work out and do your ripples first (the curved lines at water line or near the rub rail). Just make sure you have an overall game plan to work from the center out. You should have a large area in which to cut the film, fortunately my late wife love to sew and I had plenty of cutting surfaces to work on. You will want straight edges and a rolling cutter. One other word on application is to make sure you have a good sticky edge. I had some older film that I had stored and the glue on the edges had dried just a little and didn’t go down as nicely as the first time.
If you make a small mistake it can be carefully removed re-wet and do it again. Ninety percent of the learning curve is in the first sheet applied. Four hands are helpful but not necessary and light to no wind, not excessively hot or cold, 50 to 70 degrees in the shade.
Please look at my pictures in my folder here on Tugnuts. In real life no one sees it unless I point it out and just barely, it’s the edges that you can see, at 10 feet you won't see it. The film will get really fine scratches in it too but wax or Pledge takes it right out.