Fiberglass Pop Top Painting
by Brian Hoare
During the past 2 weeks I have finally painted my pop-top. Some painting took place on the weekends, and the rest occurred after work. I was fortunate to have warm dry weather during the entire job, no morning or evening coastal fog that often occurs at my house. The entire job took about 20 hours. I removed the front luggage rack for painting, and painted the rear poptop in place. I used the Interlux fiberglass paint and products from West Marine to do the job. I basically followed all the procedures specified by Interlux for surface prep, and used all their products.
- Washed the poptop before painting with soap and water to get the dirt off.
- Removed the front luggage rack.
- Washed the tops again with X-14 for the luggage rack, and a bleach and water solution for the rear. I ran out of X-14. The bleach solution seemed to work as well as X-14 IMO.
- Sanded the tops with 60 grit using my random orbital sander, a sanding block, and by hand when required to get at the hard to get spots.
- Washed the tops off.
- Sanded the tops with 120 grit
- Washed the tops off again.
- Applied Interlux 333 brushing liquid to clean off any remaining dust and to "improve paint flow and slow hot weather drying time".
- Applied Interlux Briteside Primer to both tops. I used a paintbrush to apply the primer to the luggage rack, and both a paintbrush and roller to apply the primer to the poptop.
- Sanded tops with 120 grit.
- Cleaned top and applied brushing liquid.
- Applied another coat of primer.
- Sanded tops with 120 grit.
- Cleaned top and applied 333 brushing liquid.
- Applied Interlux Bluglo White, 1 part polyurethane paint.
- Sanded top with 220 grit
- Cleaned top and applied 333 brushing liquid.
- Applied paint - job complete
At this point the job should be complete. I wasn't happy with how the paint went on when brushed, so I ended up sanding and adding a third coat to the luggage rack.
This was a pretty tedious, time consuming task, but my top sure is shiny now. Brushing and using a roller was not the greatest. Despite all my efforts, I was unable to eliminate all the brush marks. If I had the money and equipment, I would think spraying to tops would produce better results. Heck, if I had money I would pay a professional to do the job.
Material cost - Due to my third coat on the luggage rack, I needed to buy an extra can of paint to finish the job. With careful allocation of the paint and primer, a 2-coat paint job can be done with 1 quart of paint.
1 quart Interlux Paint $23
1 quart Interlux primer $18
2 cans 333 thinner $20
Sandpaper, brushes, $17
Rollers
paint tray
X-14
latex gloves