Kent G wrote:
Good point on the black hulls. Though I do think they would look pretty sweet...
We would go through the current gel coat and when finished laying paint apply a new gel coat.
I always advise against painting Hobies. The first time it hits the trailer or the beach it will scratch. I would try to either restore the gelcoat or actually re-gelcoat it. It's a bit more labor intensive, but the finish will last waaaay longer than paint. The cost for a geloat job will be a little less material-wise and your paint guy can use primer tips on his equipment to get a good thick coat, but just getting a cheap gun that you wouldn't mind tossing if the pot goes off is a good idea. Gel takes way less skill to shoot, and is very forgiving.
My friends re-geled this boat in a 40' container/shop with a roller. Total amateurs, but it came out pretty good:
If you have to use paint. Use AWL Grip. It's as hard as nails, but it will still scratch the second the boat hits the sand. Prep is the key with paint, whereas with gel, just giving the substrate tooth works fine and will fill some pretty big scratches. AWL Grip is pricey. Probably be around $1000 for the whole system to do it right.
Or, just fix the scratches and dings and do this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=74sEyot5A_o