Once I got the whole boat sanded I had to decide how to apply the gelcoat. You and roll and tip it, which is rolling it on and then brushing it smooth or you can spray it. Gelcoat is pretty thick liquid and you have a about a 15 minute window to get what you mix up applied before it kicks (starts to set up). Spraying it requires a large fluid nozzle and preferably a pressurized cup to help assist getting the product sprayed out. The finish of either option is horrible at best compared to paint. Both need to be sanded and buffed.
Normally when a fiberglass part is produced, you have a mold which is covered in wax and then the gelcoat coat is apply with fiberglass mat and or cloth layered on top. The finish of the mold it exactly how the part will come out. They way I am doing it is opposite so there is no smooth mold and I have for sand and buff it to create a smooth surface.
Anyway, I didn't want to even try the roller and brush method as I have a large area to cover and a short window to do it in. I took one of my junk paint guns and drilled the tip out as large as I could and sprayed it that way, is it the right way, no, did it work, kind of. The right way would be to purchase a gelcoat gun but I'm never doing this again....
I wanted to make my boat look more modern so I layered out a design and decided to use multiple colors (I am gluten for punishment). The design came from a new boat I saw on a dealer website.
I sprayed the gray first. 4 coats mixed straight gelcoat and MEPK. There are thinners out there and other products that claim to thin and eliminate the wax coat (you need to seal the last coat with wax for the gelcoat to harden solid) but they compromise the strength and make the gelcoat yellow really quickly so I opted to do it the correct way.
After the fourth coat I mixed up another batch and added the liquid wax.
Since each coat kicks you have to have multiple layers of tape where the colors change and peel one layer after you spray each coat. It is a real pain but you need a hard line so when to other color buts up you can sand them both to the same height and it creates a perfect junction/line.
Removed all of the masking. And tape out the next part of my design (I used masking and vinyl fine line tapes.
After that. I eyeballed my next line and made sure my color would look good.