Thanks for the thoughtful post Jeremy.
I'll try waxing it, but first I'll need to cut the new staining. Note: I bought some West-Marine PTEF, and Elkhorn gave me some oxalic acid when I picked up the boat.
While I will try waxing, I am not optimistic, as Elkhorn delivered it waxed; I was clearly told that. (Also, when I spoke to Elkhorn about this problem he did not ask me if I had remembered to wax it, or how I waxed it.) He had obviously waxed it, and was totally puzzled as to what may be causing this.
He did send me home with a half a bottle of the wax he used, which was Scotchgard Marine Liquid Wax (3M part number 09061).
I do agree that failure to wax after cutting/buffing would probably explain the rapid return of the staining - but it's not Elkhorn's style to forget or skimp. We've got a mystery. Sail #1 after the clean-up was super low tide, dark and stinky. The SF bay can be really lame; but why only to my boat?
Regarding wet-sanding and sun damage: Compared to most Hobies out there, this one, an 03, is a baby - and I have kept it fully covered for the past two years. From what I have gathered, Hobies need more time than that to foul-out due to the sun. In addition, you know Rudy, the guy I bought it from; he took good care of it, kept it bone stock, funky plastic rudders and all; wet-sanding for speed is highly unlikely. However, Rudy was particular about his stuff and may have had it buffed too often or used harmful chemicals on areas that got chalky due to the sun. In further rebuttal to the sun-damage argument, he stored it in the same spot his entire ownership; the sun is unlikely to inflict such a uniform 360 degrees of damage. If the sun could do that, then the north side of trees would have no moss! My logic above says forget about sun damage, but why are the hulls so clean and nice under the trampoline???
I truly appreciate the help and thoughts in sleuthing this problem. I will be trying some of these solutions tomorrow.
Thanks,
Dan
Campbell, CA
03 HC17 SE
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