When you are getting quotes for a bottom job make sure you are comparing apples to apples. Many facilities quote paint the bottom as meaning, clean, light sanding scuff and paint. Other quotes include sanding the complete bottom to remove old paint, solvent wash to insure a good clean surface to paint and two coats of paint applied. The more expensive and complete quotes are , Removal of old paint, sanded to the gelcoat, epoxy barrier coat applied in a 2 to 3 step application and the bottom paint applied to the barrier coat during the curing process to insure a good bond of bottom paint to the barrier coat and barrier coat to the gel coat.
On a new boat hull or used boat hull I would aways recommend the complete application. It is pricey. When I purchased my C26 in 2016 I was given quotes between 4K and 5K for this application. Pricey!!! I decided to do it myself.
I rented Yardarms blocking and boat stands for a week (200.00) The marina let me put the boat in their storage building for a week for no cost. It was not storage season (September in Midwest) I made up a dust collector using a 5 gallon bucket and a lid with cyclone dust collector mounted to it and a five gallon wet vac. I have a Makita orbital sander and connected a vacuum hose to it and away I went. First step lift the boat off the trailer using the rented Yardarms and set the boat on stands and blocking. was Next, de-wax the hull, then sand with 80 grit sanding disks. I'm OLD so this took me about 10 hours. The Cutwater bottom has a lot of curves, a hull step, tunnel and lifting strakes which required some detailed sanding. After the sanding was completed I washed the bottom with soap and water, another wipe down of solvent to de-wax and I was ready to paint ( day 1 and 2). 2 gallons of Pettit barrier coat epoxy. I paid around 100.00 a gallon. (200.00) I applied 3 coats . I applied 2 coats on (day 3) 1 more coat the next day in the morning and the first coat of Vivid (black) (300.00 gallon + 1 quart 90.00 = 390.00) (Day 4) The next day second coat of Vivid was applied and a 3rd coat was applied from the boot line to the chine. Basically the water line where most of the slime appears while in the water. (Day 5 ). (Day 6) I lifted the boat off the stands using the Yardarms and set the boat on the trailer the project was completed. (Day 7) quick coat of wax on the hull and the boat was ready for our next trip to the water. Total cost supplies Pettit de-waxing solvents, paint thinner for the barrier epoxy, thinner for the Vivid paint, 3/16 solvent resistant paint rollers, masking tape, sanding disks around 100.00, Paint barrier and Vivid 590.00, 200.00 rental of Yardarms and stands for a week. Total 890.00 materials and equipment. I had about 30 hours of actual work for this job it was done over a 6 day period but not full days during the painting applications. A marine repair facility charging 100.00 per hour this would be 3000.00 in labor. $4K is not out of line if you are paying to have it done.
Why did I explain this? When getting quotes don't look for the cheapest quote. Ask, what is included. Know what the application includes. Sometimes it is better to spend a little more money getting a good job done that will last longer and make future applications of bottom paint better.
My first application was done September 2016. I recoated in May 2020 ( sanding with 80 grit paper until I could see a faint color of the gray barrier coat. I washed the bottom with soap and water after sanding and applied 2 more coats of Vivid. I could have easily gone another year but we were going to do a 6 month trip 2020/2021. The 2020 application took me 2 days of sanding and prep because I am OLD. 1 day to apply 2 coats of bottom paint. 590.00 for paint 50.00 for supplies 20 hours.
A shop would be 2000.00 labor and 640.00 materials. 2500.00 to 2800.00 would not be out of line to have the job done right.
Cheaper is not always better!!
tranmkp":3rhqd4xs said:
When I raced sailboats - I had Vivid sprayed on - it’s good stuff but a little soft which is good SB d bad - I used white on the bottom as it’s better for the diver - when I hauled and pressure washed - ouch - I would see a lot of it washed away
When I stopped racing - The Trinidad seemed to last for years
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The issue with Vivid is it is a hard ablative. It is ablative. It works by using the boat. I believe it works better on power boats. Sailboats that are raced have divers cleaning the bottoms regularly. Some bottom paints are better for sailboats because they have a harder finish and will hold up better for frequent bottom cleaning by divers. Pettit recommends no bottom cleaning the first 6 months after application and every 3 months after that. I never cleaned the bottom 3 months in the water in Florida and the bottom was spotless when I hauled it. I worked at a yard in New England that was 90 % sail boats and 50% of those raced in clubs weekly. Some of theses folks had their bottoms scrubbed every other week. The Vivid would not be a good application for that.