Never seen this pic before.
Found Color Photo With Anti Foul on WWII Boat
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Oh that's a common Mare Island NSY photo. It is prewar. It does not necessarily represent how this and similar boats were painted in their completed commissions appearance.
On Commission, the anti fowling would be very dark gray or black. The red is a Yard protective coating (of course) while the boat sat dock side in the water being fitted out. I expect the other Government yard, Portsmouth NSY did the same thing. Both yards built very closely to one another. I am sure Electric boat commercial yard was the same in respect to a red in fitting out, but would be taken into dry dock prior ro commissioning and getting her officail Navy (not yard) colors.. So if your building a WW2 fleet boat, black anti fowling.
Mare Island launched the USS Scamp (SSN-588) in a red too al the way up to her designed water line too. I built for the Museum in Vallejo California the scamp as launched. The USS Permit (SSN-594) I show in Navy scheme, with red up only to mid hull, not the waterline. When Scamp was commissioned in 1961, I'm certain she was painted with red anti-fowling up to mid hull only. The red is a yard scheme, not a Navy scheme. Its a important distinction models must be aware of.
StevenLast edited by Albacore 569; 03-14-2023, 07:27 PM.Comment
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While living in Christchurch New Zealand, I went to the local boat supply shop and picked up a color card for their antifouling paints. I chose a color very similar to what you have shown here. I then went to the Automotive paint shop and had them mix up 250ml 2K of a color that matched. This was 14 years ago and I am still using it! This is very close to the commercial pail color used by Mearsk Line at that time. using it!Comment
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The paint was 2K and done by airbrush. I have to mix color, hardener and reducer. Like typical automotive paint it's HARD AND TOUGH!Comment
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