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With that much corrosion and it looks like the scrape has gotten beyond the gel coat, I'd be concerned about water intrusion into the transom. Have you checked for soft spots and such? If everything is dry, go ahead and try to re gelcoat, but you might need to do some fiberglass work there too. Not an expert by any means, so if I'm boss, consider me already scolded
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I do this for a living
Thanks for all the replies. I think the picture makes it look worse than it is. It is only about 3 inches long and never more than a milimeter deep. There are no soft spots. Sounds like I can sand it, fill it, and re-coat it. Probably take all day but i'll post updates once i do it.
I do this for a livingGet out an angle grinder with a sanding disc and grind out the affected area.You want to find out the affected area plus two inches or so beveling it as you go. Example, if it's a 2x6 inch area, you would grind out 4x8, with the bevel only as deep as the deepest boo-booUsing epoxy on polyester (what 99.9% of fiberglass boats are made out of) doesn't really work because of a chemical incompatibility. It might work for a while, but you'd have to eventually do it again. Get some polyester resin, milled fiber, and or silica thickener and make a putty, patch with the putty, sand till its smooth, and then gel coat over it.Make sure to have a surfacing agent in your gel coat. Polyester resin needs to be inhibited from the air in order to cure properly. My advice, google "fiberglass supply Burlington Washington"They are the absolute best when it comes to getting you what you need. Explain the problem, they have a great online store and ship anywhere