A friend's gear - well looked after.... a very careful owner - definitely not scratches. Covers are used at all times when stowed. Wondering if it could be water affecting the gloss coat from being stored with covers while wet?

A friend's gear - well looked after.... a very careful owner - definitely not scratches. Covers are used at all times when stowed. Wondering if it could be water affecting the gloss coat from being stored with covers while wet?

Yes you're spot on. Very similar issues with axis foils. Wet foils stored in covers will milk up the hot coat.
A friend fixed his axis mast by Wet-sanding then Bunnings clear rattle can over it.
It doesn't make a difference on performance so I wouldn't be too bothered!
I always rinse foil with fresh water and let dry, if foil covers are wet inside open them up and let dry out too.
Do same for board and board bag, water can damage surface of board if it is wet too long, guessing days.
The bigger question is whether it affects performance.
Nope. Just visually milks the clear coat. Plus a wet sand every few months isn't a bad move for foils. Keep them true and blemish free
The bigger question is whether it affects performance.
Nope. Just visually milks the clear coat. Plus a wet sand every few months isn't a bad move for foils. Keep them true and blemish free
What?, I have never wet sanded my AFS foil and never will, sanding removes material, why would I want to do that?
The bigger question is whether it affects performance.
Nope. Just visually milks the clear coat. Plus a wet sand every few months isn't a bad move for foils. Keep them true and blemish free
What?, I have never wet sanded my AFS foil and never will, sanding removes material, why would I want to do that?
Foils shouldnt be polished shiney, general consensus seems to be 600-800 grit sandpaper is the way to go for best performance, but opinions differ a lot. I've even heard one foil designer say max 220 :O. The clear coat is bad regardless, only there for the looks, but bad for the performance. More drag and strange crashes at speed due to suddenly losing grip. Nico prien has a video about it.
Thanks for all of the feedback - might advise him to try wiping with acetone - works with water marks on furniture.
yeah, i've got something like than in my mast. According with the manufacturer it won't hurt the reliability. Just cosmetic
The bigger question is whether it affects performance.
Nope. Just visually milks the clear coat. Plus a wet sand every few months isn't a bad move for foils. Keep them true and blemish free
What?, I have never wet sanded my AFS foil and never will, sanding removes material, why would I want to do that?
Foils shouldnt be polished shiney, general consensus seems to be 600-800 grit sandpaper is the way to go for best performance, but opinions differ a lot. I've even heard one foil designer say max 220 :O. The clear coat is bad regardless, only there for the looks, but bad for the performance. More drag and strange crashes at speed due to suddenly losing grip. Nico prien has a video about it.
Depends on who you talk to, some will say wet sand from 600-2000. Depends if you care enough.
Also @Sandman lol, that's the point of sanding it? If you're riding up the beach ect, it's a good idea.
@W100 Acetone will just strip stickers, won't really help
Furniture if it gets watermarks can be removed by lighting methylated spirit on it you have to blow it out before it gets to hot but it draws the moisture out quiet well
The main reason to wet sand around here is scratches caused by underwater rocks. I know, go deepter. We all do, but those rocks are everywhere within 50 meters of any launch. Even Flroda's coral gravel will scratch a foil.
I have lightly sanded out scratches, but they sounded like they were talking about sanding the WHOLE foil on a routine basis, do not see the purpose of that. Though I am on a bay with a sand bottom, so rarely get scratches on the wing and stabilizer.
Wet sanded finish is the best. Glossy also ventilates more easily. Use fresh water and alcohol to remove grease before use.