Three Bridge Fiasco (Doublehanded) at Singlehanded Sailing SocietyJanuary 30
Story
Fantastic day during the Three Bridge and Great turn out with 25 e27s participating.
SSS TBF Trophy Meeting Oakland Yacht Club, 7:30 pm Wednesday, February 10th.

Congratulations to the winners!

DH : El Raton (6th out of 284 overall) Recap by Ray
SH : TAZ!! (1st out of 41 overall) Recap by George
Result
PosBoatTotalRace 1
1El Raton11
2Shenanigans22
3Witchy Woman33
4Chile Dog44
5Peaches55
6Wile E Coyote66
7Light'n Up77
8Verve88
9Take Five99
10Taz!!1010
11Ergo1111
12Abigail Morgan1212
13Desperado1313
14Magic1414
15Magic Bus1515
16Thumper1616
17Dianne1717
18Opa!1818
19Get Happy!!20DNF
19Moxie20DNF
19Swampdonkey20DNF
19Attack From Mars20DNF
19Wetsu20DNF
19Mirage20DNF
19Discotheque20DNS
19Elise20DNS
export csv

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Author: Ralph Deeds ([email protected]) contact the author
Subject: Re: Blisters.
Info: (26766 views) Posted: Monday 12-10-01 07:16:00 PM
My boat has wet sailed in fresh water since 1986. It was sprayed originally with a VC Tar barrier coat and VC 17. I have had a few small, superficial blisters on the bottom and along the waterline at the bow. I sand them off and fill them with epoxy and micro baloons and apply VC Tar to the affected area. (Not sure it's still available.) I've filled the ones along the waterline with epoxy with white pigment added. One other boat in our fleet has had blisters. The owner treated them himself--removing the bottom paint, sanding the blisters, filling them and rolling on Gougeon epoxy. This was quite a job and didn't completely solve the problem, so the next owner had the work done professionally--sanding, filling, fairing and applying a new barrier coat. It was not cheap, but I don't think he's had any problems since.

I have always tried to avoid sanding the gelcoat because a fiberglass guru once told me that all that would do was damage the finish and fairness of the bottom when it came out of the mold. He said that it's a mistake to break the surface of gelcoat on the bottom if avoidable. That will cause it to absorb more water and lead to blisters. And most people who sand boat bottoms don't know what they are doing and end up sanding unevenly and making them less fair that they were when they started. Every spring I just sand the VC 17 lightly and touch up any bare spots. When I see any white, I stop sanding and start painting.

Blistering hasn't been discussed much by the class, because most of the class is in San Francisco where nearly all the boats are dry sailed. So, for them, blistering is pretty much a non-issue. At least that's my impression from the hinterlands.

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