noseoil wrote:Michael, very nice job on the fill & sand. That edge looks very good & perfectly true. Are you going to break it at all, or leave the hard edge? Just curious about chipping later on with an edge that hard & clean. Really going to be beautiful with the paint in place.
Thank you Fellas. To answer your questions, I am leaving the edge. There's a couple reasons for that. First, I like the precise way it looks. I have a lot of practice sharpening edges on the running surfaces of the Hydro and I just like it. Keep in mind, the thickness of the filler is very thin. ( We're talking about mill's here. The most difficult part of the sanding process was being sure not to sand through it to the carbon fiber beneath.) It would take a serious hit to chip it and a hit that hard would chip anything, regardless. So let's hope that doesn't happen. Secondly, after lots of consideration, we've decided not to paint the roof. I could primer it, probably get base coat on it, but being able to spray clear and get it perfect would be next to impossible due to the size. Being 7 1/2' wide and 8 1/2' tall I just couldn't make the reach without swinging from a harness on a crane or something! We strongly considered building scaffolding over it but even then it would have to be moveable and I would need a couple guys slowly moving it forward as I went. Keeping the dirt out of it with that scenario would be impossible as well. I've considered a couple other options but all in all it's just not practical or cost effective to paint the roof. Therefore I'm reserving paint for the sides only. On the roof, we've decided to do a vinyl wrap. Our race team used to do vinyl wrap on the boat, before I was hired to do the paint work. They ran vinyl wrap for 3 years which held up well and looked very nice. It was surprisingly very durable at 200 miles an hour. Also, it held up nicely to rock chips while being hauled by the big rig cross country. The problem with vinyl on a race boat is it hides cracks, which isn't good. Cracks needed to be identified and repaired so the dang think doesn't come apart at high speed! There are really high tech vinyl choices available now, including brushed aluminum and carbon fiber. I think the added texture will lend itself well to the roof area and the sharp edge makes a nice clean break for the vinyl. It's thin enough that you can't see the edge from the side either. We have already laid down a test piece and it really looks fantastic. If I wasn't a painter I would wrap the whole thing and be done!
