Sunbeam":op5zi4rk said:
On my CD 16 cruiser, even after waxing the roof overhand accent area as many as 4 times a year, the gelcoat would turn to a haze shortly after each waxing.
I just noticed this and meant to comment, since the thread did include mention of "learning to love" the existing gelcoat color (whatever it may be). When the gelcoat fades, it's the top layer oxidizing. You could think of it sort of like dead skin on top. When you wax that, it looks good again, but that's a sort of "fake good" - kind of like getting a bare piece of wood wet and it looks varnished, but only until it dries. But, you can still bring the gelcoat back to "real" life - you just have to remove the oxidized layer before waxing. There are a few ways, examples of which are compounding and wet-sanding. Then, once you have the boat shiny and "right" again....
then you can protect it with wax. In other words, the wax protects what you already have underneath (it has UV filters, etc.), but it alone is not what gives you the shine and color. So you were probably getting the wet look from the wax, but that's much more temporary than starting with good looking gelcoat before you wax (which of course is also temporary, like anything, but it's a much longer term temporary

).