Dale M. wrote:Basically its sand and clean wood surface, spread on a layer of resin ( catalyzed), place cloth or mat over resin and apply a another coat of resin and squeegee out all the air bubbles and get material to lay flat and as smooth as possible... Let cure out.... Add several more layers of resin and then sand till smooth and then polish with rubbing compound to bring out shine....
OF course its more complex than that. But that is the 5 minute course on fiber glassing...
Probably best thing to do is do internet search and find a few sites (mostly those who manufacture and sell "fiber glassing" products) and read up on their "how to's"....
Its not difficult, but there is a few things that are critical.... How much catalyst you put into resin to make it set is critical and relative to ambient temperature... IF temperature is to cool resin does not work well... IF moderate temperatures and catalyzed correctly you have maybe 20 minutes "pot life" (working time) once it starts to "jello" in pot "stop" its over for that mix... To much catalysis and warm weather and it goes off fast to point it creates so much heat it will hiss and steam in the pot and you have small dragon on your hands.....
When doing FG work everything you use should be disposable..... Brushes, mixing cups (I use hot "coated" paper cups - not plastic or Styrofoam or waxed cups) mixing sticks, clothes, latex gloves.... Always have plenty of acetone on hand to wash tools you want to reuse (brushes) but you have to get them into acetone before resin sets.... Put down drop cloths because if you drip any of spill any on shop floor it will be there FOREVER.......
Dale
angib wrote:I would add that it's important not to think this is a 'low effort system'. Coating with resin and fiberglass is pretty easy, but if you want a perfectly smooth glossy finish, there is a lot more work (and skill) required to get that by sanding and filling the surface. This is not a 'wipe on, wipe off' process!
Scouterjan wrote:I have done lots of glass repairs of commercial truck front ends, and FG canoes but never on wood. Why is the cloth neccessary? I just want a few coats to make the outer skin as waterproof as possible, it rains LOTS here in the PNW
Jan
Scouterjan wrote:I have done lots of glass repairs of commercial truck front ends, and FG canoes but never on wood. Why is the cloth neccessary? I just want a few coats to make the outer skin as waterproof as possible, it rains LOTS here in the PNW
Jan
Scouterjan wrote:I have done lots of glass repairs of commercial truck front ends, and FG canoes but never on wood. Why is the cloth neccessary? I just want a few coats to make the outer skin as waterproof as possible, it rains LOTS here in the PNW
Jan
PcHistorian wrote:ok, I like this stuff, what I want to know is, with all the talk here of "foamies" can the foam outer surface be fiber glassed and painted for a hard, light surface. Any thickness would protect the foam from pebbles and stones while traveling. I'm worried it will dissolve the foam, like contact cement on styrofoam.
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