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#1
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![]() Help me please guys, I'm just about to lay up a hull with two layers of uni-directional cloth and epoxy and I want to lay peel ply over it. My problem is that I have very little experience with laminating, confined only to repairing the occaisionally holed dinghy after being too stupid. I have just done the initial layup which called for six layers of woven cloth in the keel area, in preparation for the full hull layup. I didn't want to try to do the entire layup in one go because I would not have enough help (I think) or experience to do it all. I would also have a relatively small area to put right if I botched it up. That was a good idea as it turned out. So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. Which means more work sanding I suppose, but what bothers me is that I tried REALLY hard not to stretch the peel ply as I brushed it smooth, but I guess I must have done. I need to do the full layup on the hull now, but I'm worried that I'll botch it again and it's gonna look really bad. Any tips from out there? Can you not brush the damn stuff at all? I did put more epoxy on than I needed in fear of not having enough. Would that have had an effect? If so, When do you know that it's just right? Thanks in advance, Pete |
#2
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Pete,
I guess I don't undestand what you are trying to do. Are you using the peel-ply to make surface the for future lay-up? If so - Why? Are you working overhead? Matt Colie pete wrote: Help me please guys, I'm just about to lay up a hull with two layers of uni-directional cloth and epoxy and I want to lay peel ply over it. My problem is that I have very little experience with laminating, confined only to repairing the occaisionally holed dinghy after being too stupid. I have just done the initial layup which called for six layers of woven cloth in the keel area, in preparation for the full hull layup. I didn't want to try to do the entire layup in one go because I would not have enough help (I think) or experience to do it all. I would also have a relatively small area to put right if I botched it up. That was a good idea as it turned out. So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. Which means more work sanding I suppose, but what bothers me is that I tried REALLY hard not to stretch the peel ply as I brushed it smooth, but I guess I must have done. I need to do the full layup on the hull now, but I'm worried that I'll botch it again and it's gonna look really bad. Any tips from out there? Can you not brush the damn stuff at all? I did put more epoxy on than I needed in fear of not having enough. Would that have had an effect? If so, When do you know that it's just right? Thanks in advance, Pete |
#3
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On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 19:58:57 +0200, pete
wrote: So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. ========================================= It's my understanding that peel ply is normally used in conjunction with vacuum bagging. The vacuum bag maintains even surface pressure during the cure and prevents wrinkling. Since you are apparently not trying to achieve particularly low resin/glass ratios, something like a shop vac would probably be sufficient. |
#4
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I use peel ply even when not bagging. It helps in two ways- squeegeeing
the layup out to a smooth forn with minimal resin content and it leaves a surface with a very bond-able finish and no amine blush. I use the plastic squeegees (bondo spreaders), over the peelply, to smooth the layup out. If you've gotten a wrinkly surface, you didn't squeegee hard enough. No harm, 'cept a bit of extra weight. Peel it off and continue. pete wrote: Help me please guys, I'm just about to lay up a hull with two layers of uni-directional cloth and epoxy and I want to lay peel ply over it. My problem is that I have very little experience with laminating, confined only to repairing the occaisionally holed dinghy after being too stupid. I have just done the initial layup which called for six layers of woven cloth in the keel area, in preparation for the full hull layup. I didn't want to try to do the entire layup in one go because I would not have enough help (I think) or experience to do it all. I would also have a relatively small area to put right if I botched it up. That was a good idea as it turned out. So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. Which means more work sanding I suppose, but what bothers me is that I tried REALLY hard not to stretch the peel ply as I brushed it smooth, but I guess I must have done. I need to do the full layup on the hull now, but I'm worried that I'll botch it again and it's gonna look really bad. Any tips from out there? Can you not brush the damn stuff at all? I did put more epoxy on than I needed in fear of not having enough. Would that have had an effect? If so, When do you know that it's just right? Thanks in advance, Pete |
#5
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On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 14:53:34 -0400, Matt Colie
wrote: Pete, I guess I don't undestand what you are trying to do. Are you using the peel-ply to make surface the for future lay-up? If so - Why? Are you working overhead? I'm not working overhead but on an inverted hull - sorry sometimes I don't make myself very clear. I have laid six layers of glass cloth over the area where the keel will be for reinforcement, after that I will be covering that and the rest of the hull with more cloth. I am used peel ply to leave a good surface for the following layer of cloth and to avoid any amine blush. After the next layers I want to use peel ply for the same reasons, for the fairing compound. ie it will not need sanding. Pete Matt Colie pete wrote: Help me please guys, I'm just about to lay up a hull with two layers of uni-directional cloth and epoxy and I want to lay peel ply over it. My problem is that I have very little experience with laminating, confined only to repairing the occaisionally holed dinghy after being too stupid. I have just done the initial layup which called for six layers of woven cloth in the keel area, in preparation for the full hull layup. I didn't want to try to do the entire layup in one go because I would not have enough help (I think) or experience to do it all. I would also have a relatively small area to put right if I botched it up. That was a good idea as it turned out. So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. Which means more work sanding I suppose, but what bothers me is that I tried REALLY hard not to stretch the peel ply as I brushed it smooth, but I guess I must have done. I need to do the full layup on the hull now, but I'm worried that I'll botch it again and it's gonna look really bad. Any tips from out there? Can you not brush the damn stuff at all? I did put more epoxy on than I needed in fear of not having enough. Would that have had an effect? If so, When do you know that it's just right? Thanks in advance, Pete |
#6
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On Tue, 07 Sep 2004 04:50:44 GMT, Jim Conlin
wrote: I use peel ply even when not bagging. It helps in two ways- squeegeeing the layup out to a smooth forn with minimal resin content and it leaves a surface with a very bond-able finish and no amine blush. I use the plastic squeegees (bondo spreaders), over the peelply, to smooth the layup out. If you've gotten a wrinkly surface, you didn't squeegee hard enough. No harm, 'cept a bit of extra weight. Peel it off and continue. pete wrote: Aha, I thought I was doing the right thing by being gentle; the advice I was given was to avoid stretching the stuff because when it shrinks back it rucks up. I guess I took the advice too literally. Pete |
#7
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From the West System site:
879 Release Fabric Economical Release Fabric is a tough, finely woven nylon fabric treated with a release agent. It is used to separate the absorber, breather and vacuum bag from the laminate in vacuum bagging operations. Excess epoxy bleeds through and is peeled from the cured laminate along with the Release Fabric. It's also used in hand lay-up applications to allow more squeegee pressure and protect the lay-up from contamination. Peels easily and leaves a smooth textured surface, ready for bonding or finishing. Not recommended for post-cure temperatures over 120°F (49°C). 60" wide x 2 yd., 10 yd. rolls. 60" x 9" sheet. Matt Colie wrote: Pete, Peel-ply is usually used for vac-bag or other clamping systems. If you don't have to fight to hold the material in place - don't. The peel-ply material is also heavily loaded with a silicon based relase agent. I would be afraid of having that between lay-ups and it is not easy to clean off completely. The amine blush, on the other hand, washes right off. The West/Gougeon book cover this well. You should be able to create a good surface without anything other than a squeegee. If you want a better surface for final surface, get some fine weave 1-2oz cloth and use that as the last layer. If that is not good enough, put a finish holder of mylar or polyethylene and comb out the bubbles with a squeegee. Good Luck Matt Colie pete wrote: On Mon, 06 Sep 2004 14:53:34 -0400, Matt Colie wrote: Pete, I guess I don't undestand what you are trying to do. Are you using the peel-ply to make surface the for future lay-up? If so - Why? Are you working overhead? I'm not working overhead but on an inverted hull - sorry sometimes I don't make myself very clear. I have laid six layers of glass cloth over the area where the keel will be for reinforcement, after that I will be covering that and the rest of the hull with more cloth. I am used peel ply to leave a good surface for the following layer of cloth and to avoid any amine blush. After the next layers I want to use peel ply for the same reasons, for the fairing compound. ie it will not need sanding. Pete Matt Colie pete wrote: Help me please guys, I'm just about to lay up a hull with two layers of uni-directional cloth and epoxy and I want to lay peel ply over it. My problem is that I have very little experience with laminating, confined only to repairing the occaisionally holed dinghy after being too stupid. I have just done the initial layup which called for six layers of woven cloth in the keel area, in preparation for the full hull layup. I didn't want to try to do the entire layup in one go because I would not have enough help (I think) or experience to do it all. I would also have a relatively small area to put right if I botched it up. That was a good idea as it turned out. So I laid up the cloth and epoxy, and laid on the peel ply. It looked really nice until I came back a day later and saw that it had transformed itself from a nice smooth oval of cloth to a picture of the North Sea on a bad day. More wrinkles than an elephants trunk. Which means more work sanding I suppose, but what bothers me is that I tried REALLY hard not to stretch the peel ply as I brushed it smooth, but I guess I must have done. I need to do the full layup on the hull now, but I'm worried that I'll botch it again and it's gonna look really bad. Any tips from out there? Can you not brush the damn stuff at all? I did put more epoxy on than I needed in fear of not having enough. Would that have had an effect? If so, When do you know that it's just right? Thanks in advance, Pete |
#8
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Thanks for all the advice, I tried a new sample last night and yup, I
didn't squeegee anywhere near hard enough. Nearly had a fit when I saw how much excess resin came out Pete |
#9
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Pete,
I'm glad you figured it out and the Jim's book is newer than mine (by a several revisions). Most all the glass work I have done in the last decade has been vacuum bag largely to get the resin weight down. - sound familiar - more for weight than cost - but I don't mind cheaper either. Thanx Jim, Matt Colie On Tue, 07 Sep 2004 04:50:44 GMT, Jim Conlin wrote: I use peel ply even when not bagging. It helps in two ways- squeegeeing the layup out to a smooth forn with minimal resin content and it leaves a surface with a very bond-able finish and no amine blush. I use the plastic squeegees (bondo spreaders), over the peelply, to smooth the layup out. If you've gotten a wrinkly surface, you didn't squeegee hard enough. No harm, 'cept a bit of extra weight. Peel it off and continue. pete wrote: Aha, I thought I was doing the right thing by being gentle; the advice I was given was to avoid stretching the stuff because when it shrinks back it rucks up. I guess I took the advice too literally. Pete |
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