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Old 12-15-2009, 01:35 PM
Msalvatore47 Msalvatore47 is offline
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Need help with sanding

I own a Rigid 6" D.A. random orbital sander....electrical.
question numero uno...
1) Do i need to wet sand my boat? (i'm completely restoring this boat and it has alot of spider cracks)
2)If i do need to can i do so with my currently owned sander?
3)If i buy a pneumatic sander, how big of an air compressor do i need??
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Old 12-15-2009, 01:37 PM
Kay9 Kay9 is offline
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Your planning to re-shoot the Jel-coat then?

I would think your 6" DA would be just fine.

K9
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Old 12-15-2009, 04:07 PM
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TeddyDiver TeddyDiver is offline
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1. Depends what you going to put on the sanded surface. Check instructions..
2. I'd rather wetsand by hand if the material ain't very hard.. allmost as fast and better quality
3. Big.. atleast double the sander air consumption .
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Old 12-15-2009, 07:44 PM
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alan white alan white is offline
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The random orbit sander will take you to 220 grit. Be thorough. Follow the R.O. with wet/dry by hand (some will recommend power-wet-sanding but I haven't tried it yet). You may go through 80 grit, 120,180,220,320,400,600. and 1000 grits but the surface you get is worth it. I'd guess about 6-8 sq ft per hour.
Then machine compound. Spider webbing is too deep to remove. You have to live with it or redo the gelcoat.
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Old 12-16-2009, 08:54 AM
pescaloco pescaloco is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Msalvatore47 View Post
I own a Rigid 6" D.A. random orbital sander....electrical.
question numero uno...
1) Do i need to wet sand my boat? (i'm completely restoring this boat and it has alot of spider cracks)
2)If i do need to can i do so with my currently owned sander?
3)If i buy a pneumatic sander, how big of an air compressor do i need??
Yes you can wetsand with your electric. (you know water and electricity don't mix so be carefull) I use a spray bottle and mist the surface with water use a GFI cord or adapter)

Use velcro backed sandpaper with no holes in it, if your sander has a dust collector try to block the port off. You can actually get some 5 or 6 inch wet paper at a higher quality tool supplier it is usually used for wet stone polishing I use 600 , 800, 1200.

As for an air compressor, if you have the place to use it and plan on more restoration work it will be the best tool investment you ever make. I think a 60 gallon tank is bare min for running air tools. Sanders really eat up a lot of air and you end up overworking the compressor. 80 or 100 gallon tank would be prefered.

Spider cracks have to ground or groved out completely, determine if they are just superficical cracks in the gelcoat or do they go deeper into the glass, either way they need to be removed. For the cracks you will need to use heavy paper and work out to fine like Allen and others have suggested.
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Old 03-08-2010, 05:41 PM
Msalvatore47 Msalvatore47 is offline
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thanks everyone. man i got myself into a real big hole with this thing and dont know how i'm gonna get it done by april.
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  #7  
Old 03-09-2010, 04:17 AM
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Herman Herman is offline
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Checking for spider cracks: Mix some ink in water (1:2), and wipe the surface. The ink will creep in the cracks, so they are better visible.

There are also spray cans with a similar mixture in it. (might be easier)
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