Last night, Thursday, after picking up the Jeep, I made it out to have a look at those foam and PL test pieces. The first test was a shear strength test by putting the edge of one piece down on the bench and pushing my weight down on the other piece trying to shift them parallel to the joint; didn’t budge.
Tried to pull them apart and they held up to quite a bit of effort. Next I cut thru the coupon with the steak knife. There was a relatively large area at the joint that was void. Despite having scuffed the faces with 100 grit prior to gluing, I did not sand the whole surface flat. The foam has minor dips and depressions from the manufacturing process, such as where the printed labelling is applied, and I think this void was one of those areas. Since I spread the adhesive thinly, this area didn’t get filled.
One piece of this coupon was larger than the other so the flap gave me a hand hold to pop the joint apart (only about 8 square inches now). You can see the light blue fuzz in the glue and the open pore fuzziness on the piece where the glue broke away.
At this point the glue skin was relatively easy to peel up in sections, but you can see how it lifted the printed media and more foam as it came up, suggesting that it is the foam that is the failing point, not the adhesive bond.
Next up was the test between foam and the epoxy/glass reinforced area on the front curve of the cabin. The edge near the top hadn’t fully bonded to the glass because the 1-1/2 inch thk foam didn’t conform to the curve, but I could still not break it away by hand. In fact, with the cabin up on moving dollies, I had to brace the cabin with my shin to keep it from moving around while I tried to pull the foam off. So to break the bond I ended up running a wedged shim up under the edges. It took a lot to get the piece to pop off.
I used a small paint scraper to get most of the PL up off of the epoxy, but was also able to peel up a pretty good piece relatively easily. You can see how the adhesive keyed into the unfilled yet saturated weave of the glass cloth.
I’m struggling a bit to understand how the glued up pieces can be so hard to separate manually, but once done the glue itself seems to come up relatively easily (maybe giving past testers the impression of a weak bond). I think the difference has to do with the composite nature of the joints. With the pieces held close together the joint is stiff, but once that lateral support is busted, the uniformity of the bond is lost, maybe? In other words, the sum of the parts and the stability of the way the loads are dispersed from piece to piece is a lot different when trying to wrest two pieces apart, than it is when you peel the glue away from the surface at a starting point. Kind of like a zipper; try to pull the fabric apart and the zipper is strong, but grab the zipper by the tab and it zips right apart. Maybe something like that. Bottom line, I think the PL will be a great way to bond the foam to the hardened glass/epoxy, but I have still not ruled out thickened epoxy. Other than the slight edge in filling capability, the foam to wood joints I did with TB2 seem to be just as strong, so I might “stick” with that for the raw wood areas.
Back to finessing the hatch bumper. I made an improved dog setup to get the clamps further out of the way and to create a more sturdy and reliable hold. Rather than surrounding the end of the bumper with separate blocks all clamped to the bench, I notched a scrap piece of 1x6 and offset the clamps to one side.
The drop from the previous angle rip made a nice support to hold the surface to be worked level.
The street side of the hatch flares out from the edge of the wall just a little bit more than the curb side, and I wanted to carry that line down into the bumper to avoid a sudden transition that would jump at your eye, even if the gap ends up being a little wider there (which may change again when I work the edge of the walls again). Here you can see a dry fit where the gap between the wall and skin starts out at 1/16 inch above the orange bar clamp, widens to about 1/8 inch at the blue tape which carries into the front edge of the bumper, then goes back to 1/16 inch at the change in angle between the bumper and rear edge of the floor.
You can see here (despite the bunched up blue tape on the corner round over of the lower hatch spar) how the rear of the bumper is just about fully flush with the rear of the spar. Also, that the bumper is still at rough length and extends out a bit for now.
The orange bar clamp in the above pic is being used to simulate the draw latch; the tip of the jaw has a little toe hold in the recess for the side running light just out of the picture to the left.
Compare the curb side to the pic of the street side and you can see how the gap is much more uniform (the little light slivers of oak shim are 1/16 inch thk). It’s a little hard to judge because the bumper is long and I had to put a little angle in the shot to get the flash right.
So the trick to get the spar to fit both ends simultaneously involved planing on a slight taper; one end more than the other. To do this I made marks on the side of the piece every 6 inches and transferred the mark to the top. Then I started planing at the first mark working toward the heavy end in one stroke. Then backed up 6 inches and stroked to the end again. Repeat. By doing it this way the heavy end got 10 strokes of the plane for every 1 at the shallow end, and each station along the stick got a proportional number of strokes accordingly, in a nice gradual transition. Once I had the line at the back parallel, I switched to the powered hand plane and made a couple more full passes until the rear of the bumper was flush to the rear of the lower hatch spar.
Tomorrow I plan to finish fitting the bumper and temporarily install the draw latches. Probably will remove the hatch again to do the glue up and final fairing. Maybe get back to the poly under the hatch before continuing.