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Michiel,
Any Work below 50f is a problem. Poly may cure very differently than expected (grainy or lumpy). If epoxy is not allowed to sit long enough to go exothermic, the cure may be delayed much longer than anticipated. Do a "dry run" at your assembly with truck tubes. It was an attempt like this that caused me to invest in vacuum stuff. Matt Colie Michiel wrote: Epoxy vs. Polyester again. I took the rotozip out and cut out the port half of the inner skin of the part of my deck that is cored. The balsa there is soaked and a lot of it rotten. I should have cut this open months ago. Frost clearly damaged the wood too. The starboard side appears dry and clean, just delaminated. I'm thinking of addressing the starboard side by injecting epoxy from inside. I'll need to give it a week or two for everything to dry out now. Then I'll replace the bad balsa with divinycell and replace the pieces of inner skin back. Instead of vacuum bagging, I plan to use truck tubes to apply pressure. My cabin is only four feet high or so and I think that with four R20 tubes I can get pretty far. I'm thinking to use epoxy. The reason for my choice is a slow cure. I'll be glueing/laminating large areas at once, upside down and I don't need the resin to set up on me fast. I've seen how fast polyester can cure and isn't it so that at low temperatures it may not cure right? And isn't it so that epoxy at cold temperatures will just cure very slowly? It seems that winter will work to my advantage - I'll be sure to have plenty of time to position everything. Let me know if I'm wrong. Thank you. Michiel |
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