Epoxy or Poly for poly repairs?
Do you mean mixing in the gelcoat or the pigment with the epoxy?
"Lloyd Sumpter" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 00:41:06 +0000, Alexander A. Meller wrote:
I'm doing some repairs to my Catalina 36, which is made from
polyester
resin/glass over wood (like most "fibreglass" boats). Should I stick
with poly
resin, or go with epoxy? I know epoxy is "better", but I'm concerned
that it
wouldn't stick well to the existing poly, and that the (poly?) gelcoat
won't
stick to it.
Suggestions?
Lloyd,
Based on my 30 years (mostly as an amateur repairing my own and friend's
boats,
a few summer jobs and one "inbetween serious IT employment" stint at
Waterat,
probabably the best small high performance boat builder in the galaxy"),
I would
NEVER use polyester resin to do a repair. Repair with epoxy. Sand the
area you
are repairing well and the epoxy will stick to it much better than
polyester
will.
As for gelcoat (polyester) sticking to epoxy. It works for me. Just
build up
the repair with epoxy and whatever glass, Kevlar, carbon fiber, etc.
reinforcements you intend to use, level it with epoxy and filler, sand
with 60
or 100 grit and gelcoat it. Hint - you can tint the last epoxy layer
with some
of the gelcoat, so the substrate is close to the color of the gelcoat.
Don't
use much gelcoat for this, just enough to color the epoxy resin, and
don't
bother catalysing it. Always mix fillers, tints, etc. into epoxy AFTER
mixing
the resin and hardner.
Interesting - I've never heard of this. I was taught to use the same
material
for repairs as original - the theory being a "perfect" repair would be
indistinguishable from the rest of the hull - even with xray, etc.
(talking
about cosmetic repairs here...)
Interesting tip on mixing gelcoat with epoxy.
Lloyd
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