Largest Piece Or Smallest Piece First When Laying Fiberglass Cloth Over a Tapered Edge?
dog wrote:
This is rather bad advice. In almost all cases, you WANT THE RESIN AND
PATCH TO BOND TO THE CORE. Putting plastic between the core and the
resin leaves a void too, just not one filled with gasses. Most cores
DO NOT react to Epoxy by dissolving and gassing off... especially if
the core is a good end-grain balsa, which it is on the better boats.
Not tostart an argument, but there are many foams to choose from and
some are lighter & stronger than balsa.
... If the core is not bonded to the repaired area, you have
effectively created a section that is pre-delaminated.
Yeah, that was kind of what I thought too. But you have to keep in
mind, everybody wants something different.
DSK
Yes, there are many foams to choose from, but few have the same
characteristics that make end-grain balsa such a good core material.
Few of the foams bond and wick epoxy resin as well as end-grain balsa.
Few of the foams have the compressive and sheer strength and resistance
that end-grain balsa has. Few of the foams have the high temperature
resistance to softening and deforming that balsa has. To date, nothing
that I have seen is better than a good end-grain balsa for most
applications. There are a few high-tech honeycomb materials that are
almost as good, but they're generally far more expensive and difficult
to work with than end-grain balsa.
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