[Public-List] Painting Non skid

Roger L. Kingsland r.kingsland at ksba.com
Mon Aug 13 06:53:07 PDT 2007


 


Roger Kingsland, Managing Partner
Kingsland Scott Bauer Associates

 


Derrick (et. al.),

Sorry, didn't realize email was set to send after spell check (but before I
actually read it).  Nearly correct, revised version of recent email is
below.

I just painted the deck and cabin top of "Tonic", my 1962 Rhodes 19 with
Interlux Brightside.  I had planned to mask off the non skid area and paint
with non skid additive assuming the paint would fill in the knerlling(sp?).
I was real stingy with the paint (not too much paint when charging the [not;
thru] roller, lots of pressure and work the roller until it is pretty dry)
and, after two coats, the non skid still seemed OK so I launched the dear
and went sailing.  I sanded mine but you make a good point about getting to
the bottom of the knurling [not; knelling] and in retrospect I would
probably use one of those 3M pads used to scuff up paint between coats.
They are about 1/4" thick and spongy so they might reach deeper into the
knurling [not; knelling].  Other options might be bronze wool or a soft
bristle bronze brush (don't use steel bristles as the residue will rust and
bleed through the paint).  


Roger 
PERFECT intentions #148



-----Original Message-----
From: public-list-bounces at lists.alberg30.org
[mailto:public-list-bounces at lists.alberg30.org] On Behalf Of Derrick Serrer
Sent: Sunday, August 12, 2007 10:42 AM
To: public-list at lists.alberg30.org
Subject: [Public-List] Painting Non skid

Hello everyone,
  I have a silly question. Mara's decks are in excellent condition. The
non-skid shows no sign of wear after 44 years of use. They are solid with no
soft spots but the old paint has seen better days. It is tired and chalky
and needs to be redone. Every painting instruction I have come across always
tells you to sand first. This is a no brainer in a lot of cases, I mean how
else does the new paint bond with the old paint, but I do not want to touch
the non-skid considering it is in such excellent condition. So my silly
question is how do I paint the decks without sanding off all of the non-skid
and yet allowing the paint to bond and not have to redo it very year due to
flaking off etc?
  Thanks
  Derrick
  Mara #127

       
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