Hot Tub Blister Repair Kit

Spa and Hot Tub Repairs Do you have blisters, air voids chips or cracks in your hot tub or spa? Surface Specialists offers various types of hot tub spa repairs including those for chips, dings, stains, cracks and other hot tub damage for fiberglass and acrylic hot tubs and spas. Unlike bathtubs, where water is drained after each use; spas and hot tubs tend to hold water for extended periods of time. This combined with higher heat levels and the pH level of the water may contribute to the formation of blisters in hot tubs. When water becomes trapped in an air void, the pressure causes the surface to bubble out and cause the blister. Whether your spa is a solid or multi-colored surface; don't try to color match the spa repair yourself! Surface Specialists franchises have access to several spa manufacturers coatings and are experts at color matching hot tub patterns that do not have kits available. If we do not have a franchise in your area and you think a hot tub repair franchise might be right for you, please visit our franchise opportunity website.

Revised by BoatUS editors in April 2012Fiberglass blisters occur because water passes through the gelcoat. Water soluble chemicals inside the laminate exert an osmotic pull on water outside, and some water molecules find a way through the gelcoat. As more water is attracted into the enclosed space, internal pressure builds. The water molecules aren't squirted back out the way they came in because they have combined with the attracting chemicals into a solution with a larger molecular structure. Instead, the pressure pushes the covering gelcoat into a dome--a blister.There has been a great deal of hysteria about blisters, but the reality is that the number of boats that develop serious blister problems is extremely small. An occasional blister or two is not a serious problem, any more than is an occasional gouge in the hull. Some boats seem to exhibit a greater propensity to blister, presumably due to the chemical components used and/or the lay-up schedule, but all boats are at some risk.

Surveys suggest that about one boat in four develops blisters.
Alaskan Malamute Puppies For Sale OklahomaEffecting the repair of a few hull blisters requires an appropriate quantity of epoxy resin and hardener.
Puppies For Sale In Knox PaDo not use polyester resin for blister repairs;
House For Sale In Ithaca Greeceyou need the stronger adhesion and better water impermeability epoxy provides.You also need a filler to thicken the epoxy into a putty. Never use microballoons or any other hollow or absorbent (talc, for example) fairing compound to fill blisters.A quart of acetone, a box of TSP (trisodium phosphate), a few acid brushes, and a 36-grit sanding disk completes your supply list. If the blisters penetrate the laminate, you may also need a yard of 6 to 10 ounce fiberglass cloth.

The first step in minor-blister repair is opening the blister to let it drain. Pop the dome with a chisel, screwdriver, or rotary tool. Be sure you are wearing eye protection; pressure inside a hull blister can be double that of a bottle of champagne, and the fluid that blasts out when you pop it is acid.Load a disk grinder with your 36-grit disk and grind the open blister into a shallow depression. The rule of thumb is that the depression should be 20 times as wide as it is deep, and it should only be as deep as required to remove any damaged laminate beneath the gelcoat.Use a plastic mallet or the handle of a screwdriver to tap the hull all around the blister. Sound laminate will give a sharp report. A dull or flat sound anywhere indicates additional delamination, meaning that the blister is larger than you thought. Increase the circumference (not the depth) of the depression until the laminate all around it is sound.Flush the open blister with water, then scrub it squeaky clean with a solution of hot water (if available) and TSP--about a quarter cup of TSP to a gallon of water.

Rinse thoroughly, then allow the blister to dry for at least 48 hours, longer if practical. If you dry-store your boat for the winter, grind and scrub blisters at haulout but don't fill them until launch time.Just before filling, scrub each depression briskly with a clean rag dampened with acetone.Mix a small quantity of epoxy (one pump) and paint this unthickened resin into the cavity. Wet out the entire surface of the depression. Use an acid brush to apply the epoxy and give this application 20 or 30 minutes to begin to kick. For shallow blisters, prepare a small amount of fresh epoxy (one or two pumps) and thicken it to peanut butter consistency with colloidal silica. Fill the depression completely with this mix, using a squeegee to compress and fair the filler. Silica-thickened epoxy is difficult to sand, so take extra time to fair the epoxy as well as possible while it is wet.Deep blisters require the replacement of the damaged glass fabric. Cut a disk of fiberglass cloth to match the diameter the depression, then cut several more, each a little smaller than the last.

Use only fiberglass cloth. Chopped strand mat (CSM) can be held together with a binder that is incompatible with epoxy, so never use mat with epoxy resin unless you know it is specifically intended for epoxy use.Wet the bottom of the cavity with epoxy and lay in the largest disk of cloth. Wet out the cloth with resin until it is transparent, then lay in the next, slightly smaller disk. This counterintuitive schedule of large to small maximizes the area of the secondary bond, the adhesion of the new cloth to the old laminate. Wet out the second layer, using the end of the brush to tamp the disks and compress them together. Continue adding disks and saturating them with resin until the repair is even with the surrounding surface. Curing epoxy generates heat, so if your repair requires more than 5 layers of cloth, you will need to pause after 4 or 5 to allow the epoxy to kick and the heat to dissipate before continuing.Whether you have filled the cavity with glass disks or epoxy putty, allow the filler to kick.