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Boat House
Sanding a aluminum 14' boat
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<blockquote data-quote="ccm" data-source="post: 361929" data-attributes="member: 13447"><p>Aircraft Stripper. It works well but it will take more than one coat. For my old 14ft v hull it took 1.5 gallons of the stuff ( bought 2 cans ). Buy a metal paint pan & some cheap brushes. You can reuse the brushes coat after coat as long as you rinse them out. The stuff works great. You will also need a good pair of <strong>chemical </strong> <strong>proof gloves</strong>. A pressure washer will make things easier but you can get by with a metal scraper. Total cost involved around $100 to strip the boat. I took my time with it & in the end there still was a little sanding/scraping to do around the rivets/other hard to reach areas but nothing that couldn't be knocked out in a weekend. I highly recommend it if soda blasting is to expensive or there isn't a place around that does it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ccm, post: 361929, member: 13447"] Aircraft Stripper. It works well but it will take more than one coat. For my old 14ft v hull it took 1.5 gallons of the stuff ( bought 2 cans ). Buy a metal paint pan & some cheap brushes. You can reuse the brushes coat after coat as long as you rinse them out. The stuff works great. You will also need a good pair of [b]chemical [/b] [b]proof gloves[/b]. A pressure washer will make things easier but you can get by with a metal scraper. Total cost involved around $100 to strip the boat. I took my time with it & in the end there still was a little sanding/scraping to do around the rivets/other hard to reach areas but nothing that couldn't be knocked out in a weekend. I highly recommend it if soda blasting is to expensive or there isn't a place around that does it. [/QUOTE]
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Sanding a aluminum 14' boat
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