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"Meindert Sprang" ) writes:
When my friend and I built a glued lapstrake dinghy in the winter, it was often freezing. We hung 75 watt lightbulbs between the moulds and covered the hull with a thin foam/aluminum blanket when curing overnight. Most of the time the epoxy was cured in the morning. I did much the same when working with plastic resin adhesvie on the 12 ft Dogskiff, except a couple of polytarps were draped over the boat and tucked under 2x4's along teh bottom to keep teh heat in. An electric heater and a thermometer were put underneath. The temperature was 90 deg F. It added $20 to my electicity bill. I timed the work in the evening to cure as much glue overnight as possible to reduce the curint time and electricity cost. Using light bulbs or a heater has been mentioned by a lot of peopel who have posted in this newsgroup. I too have read that epoxy is not as strong if cured in lower temperatures or if cured over a longer time. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
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