Painting bilge

Location
FL
You can get it at any auto parts store. It comes in a spray can and is very thick. It is the same stuff that is used to seal the underside of cars to prevent rust.
 

accbr

addicted
Location
Lexington, KY
I've used automotive rubberized undercoating. I actually worked VERY well. You can see some of it in the picture of one of my old kawis. Very resistant to fuel and takes a beating also. Not to mention it's black so it always looks clean.


Did you just use the spray stuff you get from auto stores?


edit : must've been typing at the same time.
 

accbr

addicted
Location
Lexington, KY
Says it on the can too. I still have a little left in the garage. Not enough for what I need, but I'll probably use that. Thanks for the replies. I should've just looked at what I already had. I think I had to order this stuff when I got it before. Been a couple of years.
 

accbr

addicted
Location
Lexington, KY
I'll put some on an old nose piece first to see how it stands up to gas. I have it on my jeep frame next to the exhaust, and heat doesn't bother it.
 

WAB

salty nuts
Location
coastal GA
POR is some mean stuff. They use it to recoat the inside of rusty motorcycle gastanks.... should hold up to pretty much anything.
 

accbr

addicted
Location
Lexington, KY
I decided to use some Rustoleum black barbeque paint. It holds up to gas because I spilled some when I was putting the tank back in, and I just left it there to see what it would do. I just wiped it up about an hour later, and it didn't leave a mark.
 

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accbr

addicted
Location
Lexington, KY
I used brush on paint. You can get the rubberized stuff the same way. If you're talking about making repairs to the hull I you'd have to sand it down. I filled the bond line and put a few layers of glass on the sides before I painted it.
 
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