Blackmirror
New member
WHat do you use to clean the applicators? I want to clean them by hand. Would any dish detergent work? Or go with something like Tide detergent?
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Your going to need several wool pads and a heavy cut compound. I would also start by washing it with a APC/Dawn mixture. This will help knock out alot of the oxidation.
I asked the owner if he had scaffolding available and he said he has a motorized scissor lift for me to use instead. They that owns this boat is also the same one that ownes the 70+ car collection I am also doing. In addition to this boat he has literally 20 others for me to do as well, including 8 jet ski's. This boat isnt quite 80 feet, its 50. I thought it was on a typical 80ft trailer. So thats 30 less feet to work with! But I have enough to keep me busy for awhile. While I was letting some BFWD flash on a vette I cleaned a small white area and hit it with a wool pad, makita rotary on level 2 and some Hi-temp cutting company and it cleaned up really well.
The owner said the last time the boat was done, it took the guy approx 100 hours to polish it entirely and he wasnt happy with it.So its my job to make it look better than new!
1. Charge by the hour
2. Do one panel at a time
3. Don't get ahead of yourself
4. Take your time
5. Over-estimate your time
I've done RV's that were that large or larger. I just estimate how long it will take to do each panel and add up the hours. Then I multiply by $45.ancing Dot: (No, I ain't cheap!)
But remember, this is a job that nobody wants to do and you drew the short straw! Don't be afraid to charge him for the work!
This RV is not quite as big as that boat. It took me 9 hours to polish and seal. BUT! It didn't take much polishing because it was in excellent shape.
The large flat side panels went really fast.
The problems come in when you have to climb, lay down, bend, stretch, and be a contortionist to do the polishing!!!
I'd give him an estimate range. Say 12-16 hours depending on how many problems you run into.
1. Charge by the hour
2. Do one panel at a time
3. Don't get ahead of yourself
4. Take your time
5. Over-estimate your time
I've done RV's that were that large or larger. I just estimate how long it will take to do each panel and add up the hours. Then I multiply by $45.ancing Dot: (No, I ain't cheap!)
But remember, this is a job that nobody wants to do and you drew the short straw! Don't be afraid to charge him for the work!
This RV is not quite as big as that boat. It took me 9 hours to polish and seal. BUT! It didn't take much polishing because it was in excellent shape.
The large flat side panels went really fast.
The problems come in when you have to climb, lay down, bend, stretch, and be a contortionist to do the polishing!!!
I'd give him an estimate range. Say 12-16 hours depending on how many problems you run into.
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When i worked in the semi truck body shop, I worked there for about 4 years. I polished cabs, trailers, septic tanks lol, and even a few stainless steel gas trucks--those suck! So im used to big things, but this boat is way bigger than anything ive ever attempted. I told him $45 an hour, I was charging $30/hr for the classic cars I have been working on. Which i think is fair, the boat Marina's around Okoboji here charge roughly $85+ an hourut:
I tried another small spot today with the wool pad and my heavy cut 3m compound and it came out a ton better. So i will probably use that unless you guys recommend one of the products from pac. If there is something out there that doesnt dust as much and will be 'quicker' id love to know!
Thanks guys for all your help!
I do a lot of boats, nothing that big, here is my opinion.
You have to charge by the hour.
Better have a rotary.
If the oxidation is such that you can scrape it off by your finger nail....you are in for a long haul. Get a 3M white scrub pad, and wash it and scrub off the oxidation. I would then either wet sand or heavy compounding M105 is a good starting point, if you need something stronger use wet sanding via an air sander. Lots of wool pads, clean often. If you work 105 right, you can finish a white gel coat pretty nice.
Use Megs #3 or #81 as a hand polish or PC it on, working it well into the gel coat.
Top it with Megs Flagship marine wax (hybrid wax).
If you can forgo the Megs 3/81 I would top it with Opti coat, and this way the owner can get 3-5 years of protection.
I would guess you're looking at 18-25 hrs on a boat that size. It takes me 14 hrs to restore an oxidate gel on a 21' ski boat.
Cheers,
GREG