Power & Motoryacht

Varnish: High Tech Or Old School?

I was a lousy sailboat captain. Sure, I could sail pretty well, navigate, dock without smashing things up too badly and avoid arrest in foreign ports. So what made me a poor professional captain? I am brightwork-challenged. And the 55-footer I skippered for four years had plenty of it: varnished cabin-trunk sides and cockpit coamings, teak decks with varnished margin planks and toe rails, varnished deck hatches and dorade boxes, varnished bits and pieces that I can’t even remember anymore. It was hell for me, and it’s a good thing I discovered steel commercial boats, or varnish might have driven me to get a real job.

My battle with brightwork took place more than four decades ago. Although I always used a top-of-the-line varnish, usually from Interlux, the finish seemed to last just a little longer than it took to clean the brush, especially under the hot Florida sun. Maintaining brightwork was an exercise in futility—I’d rather roll rocks uphill with Sisyphus than be condemned to endless varnishing.

Things are mercifully different today. There are one-and two-part polyurethane varnishes, and even a three-part varnish. Supposedly they all dry harder, last longer and can be recoated quickly, without sanding.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Power & Motoryacht

Power & Motoryacht3 min read
Grady-White Canyon 386
In the boating world, you sometimes come across an “updated” model that offers little more than a new hull color or some other insignificant changes. The Grady-White Canyon 386 definitely does not fall into that category. While it’s built upon the co
Power & Motoryacht11 min read
Vandal 46 Explorer
The waves weren’t very big—maybe only two to three feet. But they were steep and tightly spaced. They’d been generated by a steady southeast wind and were shoaling through 10-to 15-feet of water to the stern quarter of the 46-foot power catamaran who
Power & Motoryacht3 min read
Elevated Experiences
You won’t find mention of “Tesla of the Sea” anywhere on the Tyde website. That’s because Tyde founder Christoph Ballin doesn’t like the reductionist, predictable, click bait-y branding that is attached to seemingly every new electric boat debut onli

Related Books & Audiobooks