We are a marine surveying business settled in Saint Martin, French West Indies, since 2005.

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The key question when applying a new coat of antifouling paint on a vessel is to determine if the new paint will be compatible with the old one (provided that you’re not planning on completely sand out the previous coating. In such case obviously, you’ve eluded the question).

Nowadays, antifouling paints formulas vary so much in terms of active ingredient that you can easily screw up by applying say hard based paint on a silicone based one, thus compromising the adherence of the new paint on the old one. Practically, that means seeing your precious paint peeling off your hull after 1 week. It would be a shame, especially considering the price you paid for it.

Obviously, if you know that you’re applying the same paint as the one that was used the previous time, things are easy.

Problem rises when you don’t know what kind of paint is there, or when you know what type it is, but some reason, you’re unable to source it again,and you have to apply another type. 

Paint manufacturers supplies compatibility charts which can help, and if you’re lucky enough to find the reference of the old paint in it, you can consider your problem solved. 

But, as per Murphy’s law, you may probably end up not knowing if Racing from Jotun will accept a coating of Micron 77 from International. 

That’s where the barrier coat comes handy: barrier coat are primer paints which will isolate the previous coating from the new one. On top of it, they’ll increase the adherence of the new coat. 

All paint manufacturers do market their own barrier coat paint: to my mind comes Primocon from International, Vynil Primer from Jotun, or P-1 from Nautix. I wouldn’t know which one is the best, but I’m pretty sure they would all do the job.

Better safe than sorry.

It looks like a good engine (and in fact, it is really. A Yanmar 4LHA-STP, turbocharged, developing roughly 220 HP, less than 700 hours of usage):

However, if you look under, then you’ll see what sea water left in an engine bilge can do when it splashes around:

How to avoid this ? I’d suggest to spray corrosion protection products such as WD-40 or T-9 all over the engine. The idea is to keep the metal greasy at any given time (in this special case, you may want to first thoroughly rinse it with fresh water, and using a wire brush, try to get rid as much as space permits of all the rusty points).

La meilleure solution pour éviter le développement de la corrosion sur les moteurs est de protéger ces derniers avec des produits tels que le WD-40. L’idée est de s’assurer qu’une pellicule graisseuse recouvre toutes les parties metalliques du moteur, empêchant toute réaction entre le métal et l’air ambiant. Ayez la main lourde, et n’hésitez pas à répéter l’opération régulièrement (sur la photo, un Yanmar 4 cylindres 4LHA-STP, turbo compressé, de 2009, ayant moins de 700 heures).

micron 77 aka micron 66 20 liters pails

I paid this morning $4919.92 for 80 liters of Micron 77 antifouling, in 4 pails of 20 liters (color black). This brings the price per liter @ $61.49. Considering that this is wholesale pricing, and taking an admitted 20% mark-up from an intermediary, yacht owners should be able to get such paint at $73.80 per liter, or $280 per US gallon (at least in St Maarten). 

It’s interesting to compare the cost of bottom paint to some other liquid products, as seen in this infographic. We can see that your bottom paint is cheaper than Dom Perignon, while still more expensive than vodka.

Nota: Micron 77 is distributed in the US under the commercial name of Micron 66.

80 litres de peinture antifouling Micron 77 m’ont couté ce matin $4919.92, soit 3813.90 euros au cours du jour, acheté en 4 bidons de 20 litres. On arrive à un prix au litre de 47.70 euros. Ces tarifs étant réservés aux professionels, et en admettant qu’un intermédiaire appliquerait un coefficient de 20%, un particulier doit donc s’attendre à payer sa peinture 58 euros par litre (en tout cas à St Martin).

Grace à cette infographie (en anglais), on se rend compte que la peinture anti-salissure est moins chère que le Dom Perignon, mais reste plus onéreuse que la vodka

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I saw this diving board at the af of the upper platform of a 100+ feet luxury cat. It’s nice to realize that her billionaire owner have such a sense of entertainment.

Ce plongeoir est installé à l’arrière du pont supérieur d’un cata de luxe de plus de 35 mètres. L’idée que son propriétaire – un multi-milliardaire – ait su garder le goût des plaisirs simples est rassurante.