Here are a couple shots of todays effort. I ground away all the gelcoat then began grinding out the cracks on the topsides. The cracks appeared a little deeper below the waterline, so I decided not to grind them out all the way for fear of removing too much material. Instead I covered the entire area with light fiberglass cloth. It should prevent any further cracking. Now more fairing and sanding. Darnit, I thought I was done with that part!
Here is where it is located on the boat, shot from the stern.
Here is a closeup showing how much deeper the cracks are below the waterline. I imagine some water worked its way in there. Also, note the two vertical lines that almost appear to be areas of drier fiberglass. A manufacturing relic, or damage from stands/impact? We'll never know. Oh, does anyone know what the red layer might be? It was put on two years ago when the boatyard stripped the bottom paint off with a pressure washer, filled a bunch of resulting dings and chips in the gelcoat with some kind of putty, then put the red layer on followed by the bottom paint. The red layer comes off easily when wiped with acetone. I'l try to stop by the yard sometime to find out. I am hoping that it is some kind of barrier layer, but the fact that it wipes of with acetone doesn't give me much faith in that idea.
And the layer of fiberglass installed...
