by Conedodger » Sun Jun 26, 2011 9:40 am
Mike:
So far in all my testing I have yet to get TB2 to stick to just foam, and in the same way as your test it does not stick, but should we be suprised, NO. TB2 spec says it will only join porous items and foam is not at all porous.
In the same tests mine came off with little effort but over a large area it does stick a bit, Not sure how, maybe by filling the holes in the foam surface but the join has very little strength.
However if you use TB2 to cover the foam but stick to anything porous such as wood or more cloth (The floor, spars Etc) it will stick and as such hold the foam. Try a peice of foam inside two peices of wood and you will be suprised. To get any real strength you have to do both sides and sort of wrap the whole chunk of foam. Also the more parts you use that are porous the better.
TD2 is not a structual glue, once it moves it has no strength.
As to epoxy, its better than TB2/Cloth, several people have made epoxy / foam campers and they have been fine but they have used several layers of cloth to give strength and the strength is not epoxy to foam, its epoxy to more epoxy. The foam just holds the layer in place but its the layers of epoxy and cloth thats gives it the strength. Its all about wrapping not covering.
Think of it this way. Even if you made a perfect join between foam and anything, it would still come apart as the foam is not super strong. Wrap it and the foam is held in place and the whole thing becomes strong.
I have yet to have delamination of epoxy to epoxy but i would not trust epoxy to foam unless the epoxy wrapped the foam and as such spread the stress.
GPW and Eagles idea was taken from how old Kayak's were made and that was just cloth pulled between spars with some sort of liquid coating that went hard and waterproof. I think of it as early plane wings. In our case the foam is there to hold the cloth and coating in place, but the strength is the cloth and coating. Yes, spread over a large area of a whole panel of foam would add a bit of strength but its the whole combination that becomes strong. Delamination starts at an outside edge but if the whole thing is wrapped there is no edge so it stays together.
I have found its difficult to test little bits as they all fail, but as a whole it seems to work.
Wrap a piece of foam with two coatings of cloth and try it.