Andrei,
If I were going to store my boat in the water and wanted good protection  
from blisters I would apply 5 to 7 coats of Interlux 2000/2001 barrier coat 
with  
the applications EXACTLY as directions (notably -tack time, and mixing  
components).
 
I have heard anecdotally, that cool fresh water is less prone to causing  
blisters - but do you want to be a part of the ongoing test? Probably not.
 
Barrier coat and dry bilges are the best defense against blistering in your  
case. 
FWIW -I base my opinion on 30 years of maintaining late 60's thru late  90's 
built polyester resin sailboats in warm freshwater as a former marina  
operator. 
 
If you put the boat in the water, use barrier coat for your best protection  
for what you have, anti-fouling is  optional.          IMHO worth all  of what 
was charged.
 
Just another to add to your confusion - sorry.
 
Take Care, Have Fun, Go Sailing!
GO
M-17 # 316a   LB/GF!  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
In a message dated 10/17/2008 7:13:21 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

It seems  like the opinions on this topic are as varied as the people  
who sail  M-17's: I got one person who says no way without barrier  
coat, one  who says use barrier coat but less of it, one who says it's  
OK to go  without it, and one who says keep the boat on the  
trailer :-) Could  someone else weigh in on this issue to at least  
hopefully sway the  balance one way or  another?

Thanks,

Andrei.


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