question on some paint stuff

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I’d prime with zinsser (spelling?) or other solvent based primer. Just a light coat will do it.
It’ll help keep it from peeling or flaking.
 
Spray paint would not be my first choice for waterproofing wood. I would actually use epoxy to seal it and then paint over the epoxy to protect the epoxy from UV and to make it look nice.
I'm going to apply epoxy to a wood piece then primer and paint.

The epoxy I'm using is totalboat epoxy.

The epoxy gels in 40 minutes and cures in 4 hours at 72F. Can I apply primer in 4 hours without sanding, or should I wait 72 hours for the epoxy to fully cure, then sand and apply the primer?
 
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I applied Totalboat epoxy to some wood pieces on Wednesday evening. After two days, one piece still feels a bit tacky, the other pieces have cured. The instruction says the epoxy cures in 5-8 hours. I also left a heater on nearby during the two days. I don't know why this particular piece didn't cure.
Next I'm going to sand and paint. For the tacky one I will probably paint without sanding first.

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The top sides look good, eg, the block in the middle. But the sides touching the trash bag have lots of bubbles formed, where the epoxy coverage is not good. Is there a better release medium?

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I typically do one side at a time. 24 hours apart.
Is it possible the tacky you feel is just amine blush? I know west system must be washed before sanding or recoating.
 
I typically do one side at a time. 24 hours apart.
Is it possible the tacky you feel is just amine blush? I know west system must be washed before sanding or recoating.


Thanks. i'm going to wash, light sand then reapply a coat of maybe thickened epoxy. is thickened epoxy better for the sealing application than unthickened?

the resin and catalyst may have degraded after being stored in the sundeck for almost a year

totalboat epoxy also has amine blush, it needs to be washed away before applying further coats of epoxy or paint

 
I’d prime with zinsser (spelling?) or other solvent based primer. Just a light coat will do it.
It’ll help keep it from peeling or flaking.
How to paint it? A primer then a top coat, then the sealant 4200 essentially bonds just the top coat to the roof. If the top coat or the primer bubbles up, does the bond fail at once?
 
Public Service Announcement: Don't keep spray cans aboard. Many paint cans (like Rust-Oleum) use propane or butane as the propellant. Both are heavier than air, as is toluene, a common highly flammable ingredient. Cans rust through easily or fall over and discharge. Rather than keeping them in a paint locker that vents overboard and/or running the bilge blower every time one goes aboard, just keep all spray cans in a shore locker. Not just paint, products like Pledge also have a butane/propane mix as the propellant.
 
When I use 2 part epoxy to coat & seal wood I use at least a 2 step process.
First coat is thinned resin w/o hardener ( to get better penetration being thinned and not curing quickly)
2nd coat is normal mix of 2 part epoxy with additional coats optional depending on exposure and level of seal desired.
I was taught this approach by an old friend that built cedar strip canoes and was his approach before covering with glass and epoxy to get the clear impermeable coating.
 
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