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Hull wax or sandpaper

suzuki115 Have a sailing friend who tells me he sands the hull of his Cat with 600 grit sandpaper. He tells me it is his "racing secret". Says the rough hull surface holds water so that you are running on a water to water surface which is less friction vs a water to waxed surface. Is there any truth to this or has his "racing secret" been slowing him down all these years? 2002-06-10
Bob_VT It's true! The sanding creates a disruptive surface which holds the hull away from the water better than wax. Racing boats (mostly outboards) have been doing this for years. The Fountain boat company (very high end high performance boats) was speed testing a hull and the company actually drilled holes in the hull to create a disruptive surface. Last year I lightly sanded my tri-hull (85 hp Johnson) and picked up 1 1/2 mph on GPS.

Read this post for additional information:
http://forums.iboats.com/?ubb=get_topic;f=17;t=003621

Bob
2002-06-12
crab bait There's a post I posted not long ago.. it was about a product from west called guide side or sea slide or something' I forget ... but this stuff is clear ..you paint on.. lasts 100,ooo sea miles an reduces gas consumption. buy 20 %.. causes a water on water hydropontic action… 2002-06-13
SCO Shark skin is rough like sandpaper( was used as sandpaper in old days). As hydrodynamic as they are, if rough skin was a detriment, I imagine it would not be rough, but who knows. Also, maybe for a different reason and a comparison between air and water, dimpled golf balls go farther than smooth ones. The dimples produce a turbulent boundary layer that stays attached further around the back side, pressurizing the back better, and reducing the net drag. 2002-07-25

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