I've got some anti-fouling decisions to make, and I'd love to hear your comments. My "new" boat has lived in freshwater all its life, and it has a lovely fair coating of Interlux VC-17 on its bottom. This is a hard, Teflon coating, and although I'm hearing that it *could* work in the Chesapeake (or be overcoated with VC Offshore, another similar coating), it really isn't what I think I want. It's a coating that's meant to be burnished and polished for racing use, and although I might conceivably race casually (not even likely at that), I'm not a racer by any means. I've used a top-quality ablative paint in the past (Pettit Ultima SR, which is similar to Interlux Micron Extra), and been very happy with it, so that's what I know and would prefer. OTOH, life in the yard is not that charming, and I have no interest in dragging it out longer than necessary.
In looking at the West Marine "advisor," and then subsequently calling Interlux's tech line, I find that (because of solvents therein), VC-17 has to be removed completely before any other paint can go on. Interlux's tech line said it could be removed by "scraping, sanding, or stripping" (yeah, okay, I KNEW that - what else is there?). When pushed a bit for more specifics, he allowed that Interstrip 299 could be used as a stripper.
Since then, I've found out that the boat was stripped back to gelcoat a few years ago (they were changing bottom paint types), and "5 or 6" coats of Interlux 2000E barrier coat were applied, and then the VC-17. The boat had no blisters; they just figured they'd do it while the boat was bare. Personally, I would have left well enough alone, but it's on there now.
How the bottom looks now:

So this is really a multi-part question:
1) Should I keep the barrier coat on there? Is it impossible (practically speaking) to remove if I do want to remove it?
2) If I leave it, is "5 or 6" coats enough? Should I add more?
3) How should I remove the VC-17 (and what are the additional considerations if I don't want to harm the barrier coat)?
I did a bit of poking around and found that "Peel Away" makes a special formula for removing bottom paint that has a barrier coat underneath, which supposedly does not harm the barrier coat. I know that Peel Away doesn't always measure up to their claims, but in this case I wonder if it might work okay, since the VC-17 is quite thin.
I now know I could probably leave the VC-17 as is (or overcoat with VC Offshore), and it's tempting to not have to deal with the bottom now; but, on the other hand, it's clean and easy to deal with now, and I know that VC-17 is really not "me."
Has anyone done something similar? How did you go about it and what might you do differently next time? As a side note, the yard I'm at prohibits dry sanding of bottom paint, although just yesterday a guy spent all day grinding away on his failed barrier coat, so it might be loosely enforced (not saying I want to sand, mind you).
Thanks ahead,
--- Rachel