richardoren
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2006
- Messages
- 303
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 38' DOUBLE CABIN (1967 - 1971)
Hi Guys,
I thought I had this thing figured. My 1963 Hatt has zero blisters nor to my knowledge any blister history. I know that is the lucky draw, and David Pascoe says that Hatteras should have taken out a patent on blistering - but isn't that for boats built from the 1980's onwards?
What is making me post here is that the owner of a 1972 Yachtfisherman I am looking at presented me with a recent bill for a full peeling and West system treatment of his 58 footer. The invoice mentioned that it was NOT warranteed work because the owner was in a hurry and had them proceed while the hull still had humidity...
Here is a post by a member of the 1510 forum, which shows several treatment options. I thought that Hatt hulls being solid fiberglass (to the waterline on more recent models) that osmosis wasn't a real problem needing rectification unless you disliked the cosmetics or wanted to reduce drag under power. This is what LCpl Retired had to say:
" Blisters There are many schools of thought on this subject, but it comes down to how long you want to keep the boat, and your personal preference...
1. Right Way: Remove all hardware and peel the bottom, and relaminate the whole thing. Cost: about 500.00 a foot. Do this if you are keeping the boat forever.
2. Pretty Right Way: Media Blast entire bottom, grind out any remaining blisters, dry bottom for several weeks or use a tented dryer, fill blisters, barrier coat and seal and paint it. Cost 8-12,000. Do this if you are keeping the boat a very long time, or if the bottom is very bad and you plan on selling it eventually.
3.Kinda Right Way: Media Blast entire bottom, grind and fill blisters, barrier coat and paint it.. Do this if your plans are unsure and the bottom isn't too bad. Cost 5-8,000.
4. Adequate Way: Do an Intusive Test on the bottom,Grind and Fill blisters and paint it. Do this when you are ready to sell it. Until then, paint it.
5. Paint it and Run it.
The reason that 2 if By Sea is right is that these boats RARELY EVER have a structural problem with blisters, especially the earlier ones. You are not even passing along a problem to the next owner, because as long as the bottom tests dry, the boat is really fine. ON AN OLD HATTERAS THEY ARE ALMOST ALWAYS A COSMETIC ISSUE. If it bothers you fix them...Will the boat get blisters in the same spots you fixed? probably not.....but will it get blisters RIGHT NEXT to the spot you fixed?..probably!!...so??...What you are doing is preventing yourself from being beat on on survey for a bad bottom. On a high speed vessel they can cause deterioration by the hydralic press created by smashing through the waves. Unlikely on these boats. If the bottom is bad(wet), the ONLY way to cure it is to peel it and relaminate it, and this is not something you want done by the lowest bidder!!!
Bottom Line: IF the bottom tests dry...blisters are something you worry about when you BUY it...and when you SELL it..........
later, Bill"
The problem I have with this is that the hull was still wet after 2 weeks of drying. Doesn't this mean that there's a more serious problem than the traditional surface blisters usually found on old Hatts? I don't mind things that need fixing. What I don't want is something which can't be fixed (reason for going Hatt all the way!).
Richard
I thought I had this thing figured. My 1963 Hatt has zero blisters nor to my knowledge any blister history. I know that is the lucky draw, and David Pascoe says that Hatteras should have taken out a patent on blistering - but isn't that for boats built from the 1980's onwards?
What is making me post here is that the owner of a 1972 Yachtfisherman I am looking at presented me with a recent bill for a full peeling and West system treatment of his 58 footer. The invoice mentioned that it was NOT warranteed work because the owner was in a hurry and had them proceed while the hull still had humidity...

Here is a post by a member of the 1510 forum, which shows several treatment options. I thought that Hatt hulls being solid fiberglass (to the waterline on more recent models) that osmosis wasn't a real problem needing rectification unless you disliked the cosmetics or wanted to reduce drag under power. This is what LCpl Retired had to say:
" Blisters There are many schools of thought on this subject, but it comes down to how long you want to keep the boat, and your personal preference...
1. Right Way: Remove all hardware and peel the bottom, and relaminate the whole thing. Cost: about 500.00 a foot. Do this if you are keeping the boat forever.
2. Pretty Right Way: Media Blast entire bottom, grind out any remaining blisters, dry bottom for several weeks or use a tented dryer, fill blisters, barrier coat and seal and paint it. Cost 8-12,000. Do this if you are keeping the boat a very long time, or if the bottom is very bad and you plan on selling it eventually.
3.Kinda Right Way: Media Blast entire bottom, grind and fill blisters, barrier coat and paint it.. Do this if your plans are unsure and the bottom isn't too bad. Cost 5-8,000.
4. Adequate Way: Do an Intusive Test on the bottom,Grind and Fill blisters and paint it. Do this when you are ready to sell it. Until then, paint it.
5. Paint it and Run it.
The reason that 2 if By Sea is right is that these boats RARELY EVER have a structural problem with blisters, especially the earlier ones. You are not even passing along a problem to the next owner, because as long as the bottom tests dry, the boat is really fine. ON AN OLD HATTERAS THEY ARE ALMOST ALWAYS A COSMETIC ISSUE. If it bothers you fix them...Will the boat get blisters in the same spots you fixed? probably not.....but will it get blisters RIGHT NEXT to the spot you fixed?..probably!!...so??...What you are doing is preventing yourself from being beat on on survey for a bad bottom. On a high speed vessel they can cause deterioration by the hydralic press created by smashing through the waves. Unlikely on these boats. If the bottom is bad(wet), the ONLY way to cure it is to peel it and relaminate it, and this is not something you want done by the lowest bidder!!!
Bottom Line: IF the bottom tests dry...blisters are something you worry about when you BUY it...and when you SELL it..........
later, Bill"
The problem I have with this is that the hull was still wet after 2 weeks of drying. Doesn't this mean that there's a more serious problem than the traditional surface blisters usually found on old Hatts? I don't mind things that need fixing. What I don't want is something which can't be fixed (reason for going Hatt all the way!).

Richard
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