Make them yourself during laminating with scrap amounts of resin/cloth.
G-10 is nothing special, just consistent and convenient for a commercial
builder but a home builder can do well by just having precut pieces of cloth
to use on left over resin.
--
Evan Gatehouse
you'll have to rewrite my email address to get to me
ceilydh AT 3web dot net
(fools the spammers)
"Jim Conlin" wrote in message
...
I've been buying G-10 from McMaster-Carr, where 1/4" G-10 is about $23/ft^2.
Anybody got a lower-cost source?
ddinc wrote:
G-10 pressure laminates (built correctly)are up to 40% stronger than 6061
tempered aluminum.
"Evan Gatehouse" wrote in message
...
"sel1" wrote in message
. ..
Interesting thought ... but would 1/4" glass would give you anywhere near
the same strength as 1/4" aluminum? What sorts of applications have you
done
and when would you not use them. I'm thinking glass backing plated would
be
fine where there is no pressure being applied?
You could use them in pretty much all places you would use aluminum
backing
plates. You might make them a little thicker than comparable aluminum
thickness (say on the order of the bolt diameter x 0.4 as rule of thumb).
I would not use glass backing plates in areas where small dimensions are
important. Your last sentence doesn't make sense to me - why have a
fitting
where no pressure could be applied?
Glass (especially G-10) backing plates are SOP on racing yachts.
--
Evan Gatehouse
you'll have to rewrite my email address to get to me
ceilydh AT 3web dot net
(fools the spammers)
|