Surf Bort Repair Thread

Discussion in 'All Discussions' started by DawnPatrol321, Jul 13, 2016.

  1. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Sanding is about done after the 1st coat is complete, going to finish it off with the 2nd / hot coat tonight, probably finish the sanding tomorrow. Not my best work, but it'll be water tight. Hopefully I can clean it up a bit more.

    1stCoatAfterSanding.jpg 1stCoatAfterSanding2.jpg
     
  2. headhigh

    headhigh Well-Known Member

    Jul 17, 2009
    that second pic looks good man! what kind of resin are you using?
     

  3. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Thanks, I go with Ultra Clear Ding All Repair kits every time. Not the Suncure, but the Resin mix.

    ding-all-epoxy-3oz-super-repair-kit.jpg
     
  4. LBCrew

    LBCrew Well-Known Member

    Aug 12, 2009
    Noice... Pour the leftover resin in that crack in your floor. Or is it your ceiling?
     
  5. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    LOL Good idea, why didn't I think of that? :rolleyes:
     
  6. headhigh

    headhigh Well-Known Member

    Jul 17, 2009
    Not to hi-jack your thread, but heres a ding repair / restoration project from this past weekend. Pics go from newest to oldest IMG_2129.jpg IMG_1990.jpg IMG_1991.jpg IMG_1949.jpg



    (edit) ....stupid pics uploaded sideways
     
    Last edited: Feb 21, 2017
  7. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
  8. headhigh

    headhigh Well-Known Member

    Jul 17, 2009
    thanks! It's all the same board. I fixed like 7 dings and sprayed her for one of my buddies. He hated the peptobismol pink so I went with a super masculine camo design
     
  9. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Nice work, I dig the camo.
     
  10. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Hot coat done last night, probably finish with wet sand this afternoon.

    Hot Coat.jpg
     
  11. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Here's what it looked like before I started...

    Cracked Rail.jpg

     
  12. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    I read somewhere to add a little extra hardener on the hot coat to give it that shine. Seemed to do the trick.
     
  13. headhigh

    headhigh Well-Known Member

    Jul 17, 2009
    never heard that before. I know with epoxy the ratios are super important. I wonder what LBCrew would say...
     
  14. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Neither had I till I read this...

    11. Apply Another Coat
    After you have sanded the repair down flush with the shape of the surfboard, apply another coat of resin. This is sometimes referred to as a hot coat if you add a little more catalyst than you did the first time. Basically the resin will cure faster and it becomes hot as it does so. This isn't as strong of a coat but will let you put a nice looking finish on it.

    http://www.surfscience.com/topics/surfing-lifestyle/life-as-a-surfer/how-to-fix-a-surfboard-ding
     
  15. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    BTW, I did the initial repair the proper 2:1 ratio, which I think is most important. The hot coat is more for looks than anything.
     
  16. Mitchell

    Mitchell Well-Known Member

    Jan 5, 2009
    That's not a very well written explanation of a hot coat, and it only pertains to poly resin anyway. If you are using poly resin, yeah you use a bit higher catalyst ratio for the hoat coat. Not because it will be shinier, but because it will be sandable quicker, and you just don't want it sitting there runny any longer than needed. You also add surfacing agent to the resin to make it sand out better.

    If you are using epoxy resin, then the Surfscience quote is not applicable. You should use the 2:1 ratio for every step. Deviating from that 2:1 ratio by adding more hardener is not recommended, and provides no benefit. It actually could make the resin fail to cure properly.

    Also, the hot coat is not just for looks. Any repair that doesn't including that hot coat layer is susceptible to having water leak through the repair into the core of the board.
     
    Last edited: Feb 22, 2017
  17. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Gotcha. I didn't add too much extra, just a touch honestly. But it seemed to work, soooo, should be good right?
     
  18. Mitchell

    Mitchell Well-Known Member

    Jan 5, 2009
    If it was just the hot coat, and set up hard and sandable, your good.
     
  19. DawnPatrol321

    DawnPatrol321 Well-Known Member

    Mar 6, 2012
    Yeah it was just the hot coat. It seems hard and sandable, I'll know soon enough once I attempt to finish.
     
  20. headhigh

    headhigh Well-Known Member

    Jul 17, 2009
    Ya took the words right outta my mouth. As long as it kicked (fully hardened so you can sand) you're fine. After you have a batch that doesn't kick you become very diligent about you ratios. The epoxy I use is 1:.44 so I use a weight scale to make sure I'm right on the money with my mix.