whitefishpoint wrote:WARNING: When you cut FRP be VERY careful of the dust - DO NOT BREATH IT IN. I used a face mask- the kind with 2 filters. Dust masks are not good enough. I cut it out in the garage, then I would take my leaf blower and completely blow all the dust off everything and out of the garage.
len19070 wrote:22 years and still holding up well!len19070 wrote:In about 1990-91 I built a fence around my Pool.
I wanted it to be a nice privacy fence to sit on the elevated concrete around the Pool.
So I built a painted Cedar fence with FRP for the insert panels.
No paint or anything, just raw FRP openly exposed, both sides to 20 years of North Eastern Winters, Summers, radical Temp changes, rain, sun, Chlorine etc.
And that's a School yard out back, balls hitting it, all the kids, and all things associated with a School Yard.
All the things I'm hearing that FRP is not supposed to do.
I recently had to reinsert a panel that was knocked out of its slot by something from the School Yard. Something that is a regular chore.
The panel was not broken, chipped, brittle or chalky.
In fact it looked as good as the day I put it in some 20 years before.
This is one hell of a test for a material that's not supposed to be able to withstand the Sun, Temp Changes and so on.
I'm convinced that this stuff can be used outside on say....A Trailer Roof that needs a solid nonporous sheet material.
Just my experience with the stuff.
Happy Trails
Len
48Rob wrote:Len,
Good report!
Could it be that part of the reason they have done so well is that they are floating panels?
Wonder too, if like the paint/solvent formulas that have changed over the last few years, if the ingredient list is still the same between your panels, and today's?
Rob
Paradiseteardrop wrote:Hi there I have finished my teardrop and did the outside with FRP. My pics are to big so will try this way and loaded them on the internet.
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