GuyllFyre wrote:Still, I'm utterly fascinated with your build as you also vacuum bagged the sides? How did you do that? Any pictures of the processes?
Guy I felt bad that I did not do any photo documentation for you and everyone here at the Teardrop forum on my vacuum bagging process. I have learned a lot from everyone else. So I put one of my walls back into the vacuum bag and took some photos. Also I got this idea from someone else here at the Teardrop forum.
I was going to use my vacuum compressor that I built to hold down parts on my CNC, but the compressor could not pull enough air out fast enough to make a good seal with the cheap plastic bag that I was using. So I got out my "el cheapo" shop vac, and every thing worked fine at that point.
This is what I used to pull the air out.
I got a piece of 4 mill plastic 10ft wide by 25ft and some black duct tape from my local B.O.R.G.(that's Big Orange Retail Giant) I cut a piece 10 ft by 10ft, then folded it over in half and put some duct tape on both ends of the now 5 ft sections. So basically I made a big 5 ft by 10ft plastic sandwich bag, with one open end along the 10 ft side.
Then I took the end of the shop vac hose and took 2 small pieces of plywood and duct taped them (No modern civilization can exist without duct tape) to the top and bottom of the shop vac hose. This prevented the plastic from plugging up the intake hose.
I put this duct tape marvel of cheap engineering into the corner of the plastic bag after I slipped in the wall panel and taped only around the shop vac hose.
I then tucked under the wall panel the open section of plastic. And turned on the shop vac.
I used some epoxy from Aero marine products
http://www.jgreer.com/ because it gave me lots of time(1 hour plus) to get things in place, so I was not rushed in getting thing done before the glue set.
This set up will not pull the walls down so tight that it will squeeze out all the glue and have a glue starved panel, But I will give you a nice flat panel.