I am going to do just that and with .........................
The vinyl from an old king size water bed cut to fit!



But it was free

TD Beej wrote: ... Anyone have any thoughts, or a suggestion of a good hydrophobic material...
michaelwpayton wrote:TD Beej wrote: ... Anyone have any thoughts, or a suggestion of a good hydrophobic material...
Oak Ridge has exactly what you are looking for
http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/463669/new_superhydrophobic_material_could.html?cat=3
GPW wrote:A really inexpensive sealer we used to use to waterproof cardboard for airplanes (models) 75% Mineral Spirits , 25% Polyurethane ...
TD Beej wrote:I've been pondering how to make a TD water tight for a while, the basic plan that I've been leaning towards is to fiberglass and epoxy the heck out (all sides, edges and holes) of plywood and then skinning the exterior in aluminum (protection in layers). And though I've been vacillating on this, not insulating.
Reading this thread my latest brainwave is to use a hydrophobic blanket under the aluminum so even if a weakness is found in the aluminum shell the water would quickly drain out and it would also add a smidge of insulation, and the aluminum would then be able to act as a radiant barrier. Anyone have any thoughts, or a suggestion of a good hydrophobic material (fleece?).
Thanks, Beej
kennyrayandersen wrote:TD Beej wrote:I've been pondering how to make a TD water tight for a while, the basic plan that I've been leaning towards is to fiberglass and epoxy the heck out (all sides, edges and holes) of plywood and then skinning the exterior in aluminum (protection in layers). And though I've been vacillating on this, not insulating.
Reading this thread my latest brainwave is to use a hydrophobic blanket under the aluminum so even if a weakness is found in the aluminum shell the water would quickly drain out and it would also add a smidge of insulation, and the aluminum would then be able to act as a radiant barrier. Anyone have any thoughts, or a suggestion of a good hydrophobic material (fleece?).
Thanks, Beej
I was going to chime in with the I don't think epoxy is enough mantra when I saw Beej beat me to it. the fiberglass keeps the epoxy matrix from developing cracks that let the water seep in.
Steve_Cox wrote: I favor the epoxy, two coats on plywood flat surfaces, and 3 or more on plywood end grain or until the end grain surface is full and smooth with epoxy.
michaelwpayton wrote:kennyrayandersen wrote:TD Beej wrote:I've been pondering how to make a TD water tight for a while, the basic plan that I've been leaning towards is to fiberglass and epoxy the heck out (all sides, edges and holes) of plywood and then skinning the exterior in aluminum (protection in layers). And though I've been vacillating on this, not insulating.
Reading this thread my latest brainwave is to use a hydrophobic blanket under the aluminum so even if a weakness is found in the aluminum shell the water would quickly drain out and it would also add a smidge of insulation, and the aluminum would then be able to act as a radiant barrier. Anyone have any thoughts, or a suggestion of a good hydrophobic material (fleece?).
Thanks, Beej
I was going to chime in with the I don't think epoxy is enough mantra when I saw Beej beat me to it. the fiberglass keeps the epoxy matrix from developing cracks that let the water seep in.
A layer of glass (properly wetted out with good epoxy) will certainly add strength to any build. But, good marine epoxies do not micro-fracture, i.e. their flexural numbers are very high. Pull the "technical data sheet" for your epoxy, "Flexural Strength" should be in excess of 300,000 lbs. Additionally, good epoxy is absorbed, somewhat, by good ply AND good epoxy is never brittle... it's elastic... it's chemistry. When you have seen/see cracks, it's very likely that polyester was used... not epoxy.
Again, a layer of glass is great... but, if you don't use the correct wood, epoxy and methods... you're wasting your time... moisture will find its way in.
[Edit: Don't forget... epoxy MUST be UV protected, or it will breakdown. Maybe that, and/or certain fastening methods being employed, is why some are having problems.]
michaelwpayton wrote:Again, a layer of glass is great... but, if you don't use the correct wood, epoxy and methods... you're wasting your time... moisture will find its way in.
[Edit: Don't forget... epoxy MUST be UV protected, or it will breakdown. Maybe that, and/or certain fastening methods being employed, is why some are having problems.]
DesertSkies wrote:Thanks for the link, Michael.
Larry C (and others contributing to the epoxy topic), I plan to have all exteriors covered with trim which I planned to seal with silicone or something similar to keep moisture out and protect them because I can't get a radius on them.
Otherwise I'm gathering it would be better to apply the resin Michael suggested over bare wood on the walls, roof, inside doors, etc.
Am I finally getting a clue?
Cliffmeister2000 wrote:Looking at Barrie's (bgordon) build has me thinking seriously about a core-less Fiberglas trailer. Or rather, a cardboard core that is glassed on both the inside and the outside. I've never done Fiberglas, but I really like the looks of his trailer. Looks like it would last forever!
http://tnttt.com/viewto ... sc&start=0
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