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[email protected] justwaitafrekinminute@gmail.com is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Apr 2007
Posts: 7,609
Default ready to put some boat on my boat

On Jul 11, 4:21 pm, Lodewijk Stegman
wrote:
schreef oups.com





On Jul 7, 6:43 am, Lodewijk Stegman
wrote:
schreef
groups.com


Why would it not absorb water? Epoxy is not water proof, water
resistant yes, proof, no.


You make it sound as if epoxy is some sort of grease.


I don't now how you arrive at the conclusion that epoxy is not
waterproof, but I have always lived under the impression that it is
not only waterproof but even fairly vapour-proof. Solvent-free epoxy,
that is.


I have worked with it enough to know that it is usually not used in
lab conditions.


You may not use it in lab-conditions, but I am sure that you use measured
amounts of resin and hardener. Quite a different story from polyester,
where the amount of catalyst used is much less critical.

Weather, sun, stress, and goblins will make even the
most hyped epoxy, let water in.


If you are that convinced that it lets water in, I wonder why and how you
use it al all.

The key however is to engineer with
that in mind. Remember it is much harder for moisture to get out, than
in.


That is right, of course. Don't use it on wet wood. Preferably, don't use
it on massive wood of large sections.

This quality is one of the reasons epoxy is used as an
osmosis-barrier on new polyester boats, for instance.


Hummmm. sounds like a gimick to me. I have not seen a lot of boats
soaked by osmosis through the hull without some kind of disruption to
the laminate itself.


Maybe you have not seen enough polyester boats.
Osmosis (blistering of the gelcoat and sometimes of the laminate itself)
is a pretty common illness to polyester boats. It does not necessarily
mean that a boat is up for the scrapyard, but it scares the hell out of
many polyester boat-owners, allright.

But I am more of a wooden boat guy.


That figures.

Hey, I could be wrong here, but my view of this has not let me down
yet.


I'm sorry to say, but you ARE wrong. It is almost impossible to use epoxy
and wood together without depending on the waterproof qualities of epoxy.
I wonder what you have used it for and how you engineer your work if
you're so sure it leaks.

Have a great day and go build a boat!


Sure. You go build a heavy wooden boat. But don't use epoxy. You're not
knowledgeable enough.

--
Lodewijk- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


You don't know what you don't know. You certainly know nothing about
me and my experience. Next time however it would help if your read my
post and Pauls (epoxy expert, retailer) post for content, instead of
just trying to feed your ego with ignorant insults. Later kid...