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brad January 30th 04 07:37 PM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.

Jim Conlin January 30th 04 08:45 PM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
Some, for example WEST 105/205, are claimed to cure (eventually) at 40 F.
Most vendors will tell you their product's temp. range. I'd ask the vendor's
tech support whether cure temp affects the strength of the finished
product. It's prudent to try it out in a thin film on a scap before making
a mess on your boat that won't kick off 'til spring.

brad wrote:

Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.



Meindert Sprang January 30th 04 11:12 PM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
"brad" wrote in message
om...
Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.


Yes. The general rule is that the curing time doubles for each 18F/10C. a
bigger problem is moisture. The hardener likes to react with water instead
of epoxy.

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.

Meindert



William R. Watt January 31st 04 12:10 AM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
"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.


--
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[email protected] January 31st 04 02:19 AM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
I just purchased Epoxy and ordered two types of hardner: 'Normal' for
use above 60F and 'Cold Weather' for down to 40F (Want to get some
work done this winter :-)

So I supect the answer is yes, some will, but not all. Though when
talking to the tech expert, he said that even if the temp was too low,
the mixed product would cure once the temp raised.

-al-


On 30 Jan 2004 11:37:18 -0800, (brad) wrote:

Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.



Backyard Renegade January 31st 04 02:32 AM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
"Meindert Sprang" wrote in message ...
"brad" wrote in message
om...
Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.


Yes. The general rule is that the curing time doubles for each 18F/10C. a
bigger problem is moisture. The hardener likes to react with water instead
of epoxy.

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.

Meindert


The way my distributor explained it to me. Most of the major lines
will cure at that temp, slowly, and not completely. They will in most
cases be able to be cured to a point where they can be worked and are
fairly sound and for all practical purposes, we can call it cured.
There are also cold cure hardners that will come "cure" faster at
temp. To reach "full" cure, most still need some time in the high 70's
or low 80's farenheit for a day or so.
Scotty

Ron Magen February 1st 04 10:43 AM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
One of the 'small things' that can cause BIG aggravation is 'curtaining' of
the epoxy.

Fastening surfaces together is no problem - horizontal or vertical. However,
a the effect of GRAVITY is inexorable. A 'fill coat', finishing coat, or
even heavily thickened 'putty', will run or 'sag' when given an 8- to
12-hour period to 'cure'.

Hopefully it will only be to the 'green' stage or a little after, but with
Murphy it's usually a little further on. YES - this is the 'voice of
experience'. If you have to work in the cold, try to 'pre-cover'/ 'pre-make'
your individual panels . . . 'on the flat'. Also remember, the 'taped seams'
{of chines, etc.}have a rather heavy 'soaking' of epoxy or filler/epoxy mix.

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop

"Meindert Sprang" wrote in message
...
SNIP

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.

Meindert




Matt Langenfeld February 13th 04 12:51 AM

Will epoxy cure in Low Temperature
 
Yes but it will cure very slowly. You can get faster curing epoxy for
lower temperatures.

Matt Langenfeld
www.jem.e-boat.net

brad wrote:

Will epoxy cure at temperatures as low as 40 F.




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