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#1
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I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk
trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#2
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Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will
slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#3
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Wait a minute....
Would someone please explain this one for me? How will making the bottom of the boat slick (waxing it) make it slow down? I've always waxed the bottom of my boats (about once every other summer), and my speedo indicated I was going 3 to 4 mph faster after each waxing. cag "bomar" wrote in message .. . Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#4
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A non planing hull such as a sailboat will benefit from waxing as this
allows the water to flow over the hull with less resistance. A planing hull such as a bass boat, speedboat, etc. will have reduced speed due to surface tension of the water. Same principle applies to slick smooth water vs water with a ripple or small waves. The more air you can get between the hull and the water (assuming the prop stays in the water to provide push) the less drag there is. With a slightly rough surface (clean but rough) will break the surface tension between the hull and the water and allow the boat to go faster. This is why true speedboats / raceboats do not use a smooth running surface. Most racers will actually sand the hull w/ 200 grit or so sandpaper to create a texture to break the water tension. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "cag" wrote in message ... Wait a minute.... Would someone please explain this one for me? How will making the bottom of the boat slick (waxing it) make it slow down? I've always waxed the bottom of my boats (about once every other summer), and my speedo indicated I was going 3 to 4 mph faster after each waxing. cag "bomar" wrote in message .. . Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#5
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Great looking Eliminator Daytona 21' you got there. Do you hang out over at
www.screamandfly.com or www.stvowners.com ? If so what's your username? I own a STV Euroski with 280 Merc. "Tony Thomas" wrote in message news:4cMDc.127289$Sw.117784@attbi_s51... A non planing hull such as a sailboat will benefit from waxing as this allows the water to flow over the hull with less resistance. A planing hull such as a bass boat, speedboat, etc. will have reduced speed due to surface tension of the water. Same principle applies to slick smooth water vs water with a ripple or small waves. The more air you can get between the hull and the water (assuming the prop stays in the water to provide push) the less drag there is. With a slightly rough surface (clean but rough) will break the surface tension between the hull and the water and allow the boat to go faster. This is why true speedboats / raceboats do not use a smooth running surface. Most racers will actually sand the hull w/ 200 grit or so sandpaper to create a texture to break the water tension. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "cag" wrote in message ... Wait a minute.... Would someone please explain this one for me? How will making the bottom of the boat slick (waxing it) make it slow down? I've always waxed the bottom of my boats (about once every other summer), and my speedo indicated I was going 3 to 4 mph faster after each waxing. cag "bomar" wrote in message .. . Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#6
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Yes I do visit screamandfly. Have a prop for sale and trying to find a 24
Mazco. t.thomas is the username. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "Woodchuck" wrote in message ... Great looking Eliminator Daytona 21' you got there. Do you hang out over at www.screamandfly.com or www.stvowners.com ? If so what's your username? I own a STV Euroski with 280 Merc. "Tony Thomas" wrote in message news:4cMDc.127289$Sw.117784@attbi_s51... A non planing hull such as a sailboat will benefit from waxing as this allows the water to flow over the hull with less resistance. A planing hull such as a bass boat, speedboat, etc. will have reduced speed due to surface tension of the water. Same principle applies to slick smooth water vs water with a ripple or small waves. The more air you can get between the hull and the water (assuming the prop stays in the water to provide push) the less drag there is. With a slightly rough surface (clean but rough) will break the surface tension between the hull and the water and allow the boat to go faster. This is why true speedboats / raceboats do not use a smooth running surface. Most racers will actually sand the hull w/ 200 grit or so sandpaper to create a texture to break the water tension. -- Tony my boats at http://t.thomas.home.mchsi.com "cag" wrote in message ... Wait a minute.... Would someone please explain this one for me? How will making the bottom of the boat slick (waxing it) make it slow down? I've always waxed the bottom of my boats (about once every other summer), and my speedo indicated I was going 3 to 4 mph faster after each waxing. cag "bomar" wrote in message .. . Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
#7
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Water sticks better to a nice and extra smooth surface. On my 100mph+ tunnel
boat I lightly sand the surface that contacts the water with 600grit! "cag" wrote in message ... Wait a minute.... Would someone please explain this one for me? How will making the bottom of the boat slick (waxing it) make it slow down? I've always waxed the bottom of my boats (about once every other summer), and my speedo indicated I was going 3 to 4 mph faster after each waxing. cag "bomar" wrote in message .. . Waxing the areas of your hull that are in the water at planing speed will slow down your boat. If anything you want to abrade that area. As for washing the area covered by bunks.....the lake does mine for me as I boat. "JG Wall" wrote in message ... I just purchased a boat and wish to clean and wax the hull. It is on a bunk trailer. My question is - how do I clean/wax the areas of the hull that are under the trailer bunk supports and therefore not accessible for cleaning while it sits on the trailer, or do I just not bother with those areas? Thanks! |
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