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compound if necessary....
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Thanks for the info guys...
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clean with some acetone and you are ready to go. I always hand wax the name after application.
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Have we discussed vinyl lettering here?
I use vinyl.
3M vinyl letters will look good for about 7 years
Also use it...
Use a hair dryer to get it off....
That makes it easier, and you can also buy plastic razor blades
Wonder if they make those for my Gillette Sensor?
As well as the hair dryer, I buy plastic putty knives to scrape.
I use a 6" RO sander. Mows it right off.
since 1995
My boat name and hail are done in vinyl...
With the exception of gold lettering vinyl lettering is actually VERY cheap to produce...
Our name is vinyl too
11 years so far and looking good
I replaced mine the second time I painted the hull.
In a time of boats often changing hands, seems a waste to paint a name on. Vinyl works for me.
We hired a local company to do the vinyl
A straight line doesn't work on most sterns.
Thanks for the info guys...
compound if necessary....
Wash with soap/water then use solvent to de-wax/grease
If it's Awlgrip, I'd be very gentle with chemicals or compounding
3M Finesse-it works well on Awlgrip
Strip any wax off the surface then..
Any decent sign shop that does boat has transom curvature on file for most boats
Our straight-line trial-and-error...
Looks good. I was picky too.
"Sticker On!" and "Sticker Off!"
You can also buy the letters
We used vinyl on all the boats
wow - that IS ancient history
still have the CWBB burgee
Ditto.