Any downside/negatives?
A few of mine got a little thinner than I wanted so I was thinking of applying a second layer over top to increase thickness. just enough to give it that slightly raised look, probably the equivalent of an extra small drop.
Any downside/negatives?
A few of mine got a little thinner than I wanted so I was thinking of applying a second layer over top to increase thickness. just enough to give it that slightly raised look, probably the equivalent of an extra small drop.
David Geske
Boatless Family Man
Wouldn't see why it would hurt anything. not like its going to make a huge amount heavier or anything like that
I do it all the time for repairs. Clean with alcohol and recoat.
Lots of people do two coats, it's not a problem.
Especially if you're using a light build finish coat. High Build you can do a one coat finish.
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Every rod I build I do with two coats of thread finish. I purposefully put the first coat on thin to make sure it penetrates the thread and doesn't bubble or have imperfections, then a second thin coat to smooth everything out. Lots of people do three or even more coats, particularly on fancy wraps like tiger wraps.
2011 Skeeter ZX225
225 Yamaha HPDI Series 2
Minn Kota Ultrex 112 52"
Console: HDS 16 Carbon
Bow: HDS 12 Carbon, Solix 12 G2, Mega 360, Garmin 106 SV, LVS 34
Sounds great, thank you
David Geske
Boatless Family Man
I do 2 coats on all of my builds. 1st cost i use TM Lite, just to get thread thread penetration. It always looks like ass. 2nd coat, I use TM regular. It covers what the first coat didn't and it comes out perfect.
Two coats wont hurt anything. For me one heavy coat of Threadmaster Light.
I always use two coats, fist one is very thin as another poster stated.
Boatless