I cocked this job right up this year. When I lifted, the keel was a mass of rust.
So I ground the keel back to bare metal using flappy discs and then immediately rust treated it...
... the surface the next day had bubbled up nicely, with lots of watery, rusty little holes springing up!!
I chose to grind it back again, pressure washing it and then letting it "breath", washing with phosphoric acid every couple of days to keep the rust at bay, before applying four coats of epoxy to it, and then antifouling it...
Within days water trapped still inside the porous keel bubbled to the surface and I ended up with the below.
The recommendations to just go sailing would have ended with a far superior result. Oh well! Next year I will try letting the keel stand for a few months to let the water seep out, then get it professionally shot blasted, then try the epoxy route again....
....or I'll prime the rusty patches and go sailing... hmm
A chap on the boat next door who had his Coppercoated at Foxes professionally said they stood the boat for two months at the back of their heated shed and tested his iron keel with a moisture meter before they finally applied the epoxy. His looked stunning some years on without a spot of rust...