BoatBanter.com

BoatBanter.com (https://www.boatbanter.com/)
-   Boat Building (https://www.boatbanter.com/boat-building/)
-   -   Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy? (https://www.boatbanter.com/boat-building/70713-remove-not-remove-partially-cured-epoxy.html)

[email protected] June 14th 06 04:45 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan


Denny June 14th 06 07:28 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Assuming the curing temperatures are above 60 degrees and it is still
rubbery, you are hosed, it will never become hard and will get sticky
and nasty in hot weather... Plan on grinding it away... Consider a wire
brush mounted on a healthy drill motor (1/2") and lots of elbow
grease...
MAS is a fine product, I went through a couple of gallons on the past
month when I ran low on WEST...
denny - who has had every problem possible with epoxy...


cavelamb June 14th 06 09:12 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Denny wrote:

Assuming the curing temperatures are above 60 degrees and it is still
rubbery, you are hosed, it will never become hard and will get sticky
and nasty in hot weather... Plan on grinding it away... Consider a wire
brush mounted on a healthy drill motor (1/2") and lots of elbow
grease...
MAS is a fine product, I went through a couple of gallons on the past
month when I ran low on WEST...
denny - who has had every problem possible with epoxy...


It's just a gummy mess, but it has to cove off if there are any further
layers on top of it.

A scraper used like a draw knife will work better.
Clean more area quicker.

In the end, if this was supposed to be the last layer, (once cleaned!)
you will probably want to add another layer - just to get the surface back.

Best of luck...

Richard

Raynaud June 14th 06 09:52 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
@#@

It most definitely has to come off. It will never cure properly. Get
yourself an small side grinder everyone makes
one now, get the rubber backing plate attachment and use very coarse open
coat sanding disc 10-60 grit it removes rubbery material fast. Epoxy is
notorious for ruining cutting tools and clogging sand paper good luck

Ray

wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan




Brian D June 14th 06 10:53 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Unlike the others, I'd vote for trying to get it to cure. A coating on a
deck is not structural, but just for sealing and abrasion resistance. I'd
try heating up the shop/deck/boat (whatever is easiest) to about 80 F or
even higher and keep it that way for a few days. It sounds to me like the
cure is progressing, but as others have mentioned, it may or may not cure to
the final hardness that you want. I don't think that's a big deal if it
gets reasonably hard and you put a couple of fresh coats of epoxy over the
top of it ...definitely easier than trying to remove it. Consider this:
Even your mostly-cured epoxy is harder and tougher than most plywood plies
that people are protecting with epoxy ...why not try to cure what you have
and then protect *it* with more layers of epoxy?

Brian D


wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan




Ron Magen June 14th 06 11:50 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Jay,
I'd say the epoxy has finally reached the 'green stage' . . . about 10 days
late, but better then never. True, you really can't *properly* sand it yet -
but it proves that the chemical reaction IS progressing. What a lot of
people don't realize is that because the epoxy 'curing' is an 'internal
conversion' chemical process {as opposed to the 'catalyst additive' of
polyester}, a actual 'FULL CURE' can take several months. It's a geometric
progression so that after about 72-hours {if everything is done 'per
instruction'} it doesn't matter to the typical user. Additionally, because
the reaction is rather temperature dependent it can be somewhat controlled.
That is sped up or slowed down to almost a 'hibernation' point . . . I've
used it as low as the mid 30's, which supposedly you can't do.

If time is NOT a problem, and the surface is horizontal {so there is no
slippage or 'curtaining'} I'd just wait. Especially as the weather is
warming up. When it gets to the point you can't dent it with a finger nail,
give it a couple of swipes with some sandpaper. If it still gums up, wait a
bit longer and use a 'regular nail' for scratch testing. Use the time to
make some small 'test batches' so you get comfortable with mixing {BE
THROUGH - this is the MOST prevalent cause of problems}and application.

When physically possible, sand and proceed, or sand and 'paint on' a thin
cover coat of unthickened fresh epoxy and continue the project.

If not this . . . then get yourself a stack of filter masks, a Tyvek suit, a
couple of Surform tools & extra blades, belt sander & 'Planer' belts, a
4-1/2in surface grinder, and have at it.!!

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop
{PS - I understand that MAS is quite a bit over-priced for what you get . .
.. and it's formulated relatively close to where I live}
..
wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan




Brian D June 15th 06 12:08 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 

When I mix a pot of epoxy, and maybe this goes back to my painting days, I
generally mix it really well (scraping sides and bottom with square-tipped
mixing stick) then set it on the bench for a couple of minutes to 'kick'.
While I do that, I get rollers or brushed together, or wipe down the
'project', etcetera. Then I stir up the epoxy real well (again) and go
ahead with using it. I prefer that to just standing there and mixing for 3
minutes and I've never had a failed batch, even with mustard-pump measured
5:1 ratio epoxies (yikes!)

Brian


"Ron Magen" wrote in message
news:uo0kg.26606$X02.20217@trnddc02...
Jay,
I'd say the epoxy has finally reached the 'green stage' . . . about 10
days
late, but better then never. True, you really can't *properly* sand it
yet -
but it proves that the chemical reaction IS progressing. What a lot of
people don't realize is that because the epoxy 'curing' is an 'internal
conversion' chemical process {as opposed to the 'catalyst additive' of
polyester}, a actual 'FULL CURE' can take several months. It's a geometric
progression so that after about 72-hours {if everything is done 'per
instruction'} it doesn't matter to the typical user. Additionally, because
the reaction is rather temperature dependent it can be somewhat
controlled.
That is sped up or slowed down to almost a 'hibernation' point . . . I've
used it as low as the mid 30's, which supposedly you can't do.

If time is NOT a problem, and the surface is horizontal {so there is no
slippage or 'curtaining'} I'd just wait. Especially as the weather is
warming up. When it gets to the point you can't dent it with a finger
nail,
give it a couple of swipes with some sandpaper. If it still gums up, wait
a
bit longer and use a 'regular nail' for scratch testing. Use the time to
make some small 'test batches' so you get comfortable with mixing {BE
THROUGH - this is the MOST prevalent cause of problems}and application.

When physically possible, sand and proceed, or sand and 'paint on' a thin
cover coat of unthickened fresh epoxy and continue the project.

If not this . . . then get yourself a stack of filter masks, a Tyvek suit,
a
couple of Surform tools & extra blades, belt sander & 'Planer' belts, a
4-1/2in surface grinder, and have at it.!!

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop
{PS - I understand that MAS is quite a bit over-priced for what you get .
.
. and it's formulated relatively close to where I live}
.
wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan






[email protected] June 15th 06 04:27 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Denny wrote:
Assuming the curing temperatures are above 60 degrees and it is still
rubbery, you are hosed, it will never become hard and will get sticky
and nasty in hot weather... Plan on grinding it away... Consider a wire
brush mounted on a healthy drill motor (1/2") and lots of elbow
grease...
MAS is a fine product, I went through a couple of gallons on the past
month when I ran low on WEST...
denny - who has had every problem possible with epoxy...


The temperature is well over 60. The area is under the sun and is
covered with a boat cover, and the area is really really hot inside the
boat cover. Therefore, temperature should not have anything to do with
this problem. In other words, the epoxy is really in trouble, or I
should say "I am really in trouble".

I don't think there is anything wrong with MAS. This is just that
their Slow Hardener seems to be more sensitive to mixing error (their
Medium Hardener is more forgiving). I have been able to get away with
mixing not long enough using their Medium Hardener and still get epoxy
cured just fine. Unfortunately, when I switched to their Slow
Hardener, I forgot to do a test batch first, and I will have to suffer
from my own error.

Oh well...

Jay Chan


[email protected] June 15th 06 04:32 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Thanks for telling me which tools to use to remove the uncured epoxy.

What's a "side grinder"? Is it the same as a surface grinder that
another newsgroup member has suggested? I probably will go easy with
using power tools; the reason is that the area underneat the uncured
epoxy is just a thin layer of the inner skin of the cored deck. I
probably want to stick with hand tool such as a green pad, a wire
brush, a paint scraper, and white-vinegar.

Jay Chan


Raynaud wrote:
@#@

It most definitely has to come off. It will never cure properly. Get
yourself an small side grinder everyone makes
one now, get the rubber backing plate attachment and use very coarse open
coat sanding disc 10-60 grit it removes rubbery material fast. Epoxy is
notorious for ruining cutting tools and clogging sand paper good luck

Ray

wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan



[email protected] June 15th 06 04:43 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Actually, the uncured epoxy is supposed to secure the core material on
the inner skin of the cored deck. Therefore, it is structural. I
check it this morning, and I find that the area is still bouncy. I
expect that the area should be rigid enough with the combo of the inner
skin, the epoxy, and the core material; but it is not. This means I
cannot expect it to provide any structural support as a deck is
supposed to do. That is not good.

On the other hand, you are right -- removing the uncured epoxy is going
to be a messy job. I think I will give it one more week to see if will
be cured by then -- hopefully.

Jay Chan


Brian D wrote:
Unlike the others, I'd vote for trying to get it to cure. A coating on a
deck is not structural, but just for sealing and abrasion resistance. I'd
try heating up the shop/deck/boat (whatever is easiest) to about 80 F or
even higher and keep it that way for a few days. It sounds to me like the
cure is progressing, but as others have mentioned, it may or may not cure to
the final hardness that you want. I don't think that's a big deal if it
gets reasonably hard and you put a couple of fresh coats of epoxy over the
top of it ...definitely easier than trying to remove it. Consider this:
Even your mostly-cured epoxy is harder and tougher than most plywood plies
that people are protecting with epoxy ...why not try to cure what you have
and then protect *it* with more layers of epoxy?

Brian D


wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan



[email protected] June 15th 06 04:55 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.

Also thanks for the suggestion of using a surface grinder. I will look
for it in home center.

Jay Chan


Ron Magen wrote:
Jay,
I'd say the epoxy has finally reached the 'green stage' . . . about 10 days
late, but better then never. True, you really can't *properly* sand it yet -
but it proves that the chemical reaction IS progressing. What a lot of
people don't realize is that because the epoxy 'curing' is an 'internal
conversion' chemical process {as opposed to the 'catalyst additive' of
polyester}, a actual 'FULL CURE' can take several months. It's a geometric
progression so that after about 72-hours {if everything is done 'per
instruction'} it doesn't matter to the typical user. Additionally, because
the reaction is rather temperature dependent it can be somewhat controlled.
That is sped up or slowed down to almost a 'hibernation' point . . . I've
used it as low as the mid 30's, which supposedly you can't do.

If time is NOT a problem, and the surface is horizontal {so there is no
slippage or 'curtaining'} I'd just wait. Especially as the weather is
warming up. When it gets to the point you can't dent it with a finger nail,
give it a couple of swipes with some sandpaper. If it still gums up, wait a
bit longer and use a 'regular nail' for scratch testing. Use the time to
make some small 'test batches' so you get comfortable with mixing {BE
THROUGH - this is the MOST prevalent cause of problems}and application.

When physically possible, sand and proceed, or sand and 'paint on' a thin
cover coat of unthickened fresh epoxy and continue the project.

If not this . . . then get yourself a stack of filter masks, a Tyvek suit, a
couple of Surform tools & extra blades, belt sander & 'Planer' belts, a
4-1/2in surface grinder, and have at it.!!

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop
{PS - I understand that MAS is quite a bit over-priced for what you get . .
. and it's formulated relatively close to where I live}
.
wrote in message
oups.com...
I would like to get some opinions on whether I should remove partially
cured epoxy in one large area of my deck.

Due to my failure to follow instruction in mixing epoxy and failure to
do a test batch before using a new type of hardener, I had not
thoroughly mixed the epoxy long enough when I installed the core
material onto the deck. The result is that the epoxy cures very very
slowly:

- After one day, I felt that the epoxy was still wet.

- After three days, I still could use my thumb to dent the epoxy.

- After ten days (today), it is solid enough that I cannot use my
thumb to dent it; but I still can use my finger nail to dent its
surface. And I definitely cannot sand it yet.

What should I do?

Should I wait another week or so to see if it may completely cure? I
can afford to wait because I can do something else while I wait; but I
am not sure if the epoxy will be strong enough even if it is seemingly
cured.

Should I remove everything and start this over? Unfortunately, this
will be very labor intensive to remove the partially cured epoxy.

The epoxy is from MAS and the hardener is MAS slow hardener. The brand
name may or may not matter.

Jay Chan



derbyrm June 15th 06 06:05 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.




[email protected] June 15th 06 06:36 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.



cavelamb June 15th 06 10:08 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
wrote:

Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


The only times I've had problems like this have been on very humid days.


Ron Magen June 16th 06 03:00 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Jay,
It's kind of like hypothermic death in the cold climates . . . 'Your not
dead until you are WARM and dead . . .'.

Absolutely - there IS a chemical structure difference between Poly and
Epoxy. However if time is no problem I wouldn't limit the 'wait time' to a
week. In addition I would 'add energy to the reaction' by applying heat.
There are a couple of simple ways to do this, depending on the area in
question. a}Throw a tarp over the area, then an electric blanket set on
'LOW' or 'Medium'. b} set up a 'long board' or 'panel' with several simple
sockets for light bulbs. Place it SAFELY & CAREFULLY in the compartment
below the deck area. Use 100w or less bulbs. {I use arrangements like this
when building in the colder months - with the hull upside down and a tarp
thrown over & hanging down to trap the heat, and with a 'drop cord' in a
Styrofoam 'cooler' to keep the epoxy components warm}.

Once there is NO MORE apparent hardening {after a total of about 30-days or
by 'scratch test'}, then I'd make my decision. If it IS 'sandable' {even if
you have to do it gently with course paper to prevent 'gumming'} I'd apply a
thin coat of CORRECTLY mixed epoxy, then lay in a layer of Dynel. This is
NOT like f'glass. It WON'T become clear, but will still look somewhat white.
Also without several more coats of epoxy it won't be perfectly smooth.
However these are NOT BAD points for a white deck - it won't show and will
add traction. PLUS the stuff is VERY abrasion resistant.

On the remark about the 'surface grinder' . . . Yes, this is a very useful
tool - I have three of them. In your case I would not choose this first -
look at the smaller, 'straight-line' BELT SANDERS with adjustable speed.
MUCH more controllable, much more sanding material in contact with the
surface, less tiring in use, and an all-around more multi-functional tool.

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop



wrote in message
ups.com...
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the

resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two

to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or

go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.





[email protected] June 16th 06 05:12 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
I am sure I will give the partly cured epoxy a bit more time to cure.
I am not particularly enthusiastic about removing it. But I will only
give it until the end of this month. You see. The temperature inside
the tent (where the boat is) is high. I don't believe cold temperature
has anything to do with this problem. Therefore, the chance is high
that the epoxy may never cure completely. I can afford to wait because
I have something else to do anyway. But at the end, I have a feeling
that I will have to remove it.

I don't quite understand why I should use Dynel instead of regular
fiberglass cloth. Is there any particular reason why Dynel is better
suit for this situation? Thanks in advance for any follow-up info.

Glad to learn that I can use a belt sander instead of a surface
grinder. I already has a belt sander with coarse sanding belt. This
means I am all set if I need to use a power tool to remove the partly
cured epoxy.

Jay Chan


Ron Magen wrote:
Jay,
It's kind of like hypothermic death in the cold climates . . . 'Your not
dead until you are WARM and dead . . .'.

Absolutely - there IS a chemical structure difference between Poly and
Epoxy. However if time is no problem I wouldn't limit the 'wait time' to a
week. In addition I would 'add energy to the reaction' by applying heat.
There are a couple of simple ways to do this, depending on the area in
question. a}Throw a tarp over the area, then an electric blanket set on
'LOW' or 'Medium'. b} set up a 'long board' or 'panel' with several simple
sockets for light bulbs. Place it SAFELY & CAREFULLY in the compartment
below the deck area. Use 100w or less bulbs. {I use arrangements like this
when building in the colder months - with the hull upside down and a tarp
thrown over & hanging down to trap the heat, and with a 'drop cord' in a
Styrofoam 'cooler' to keep the epoxy components warm}.

Once there is NO MORE apparent hardening {after a total of about 30-days or
by 'scratch test'}, then I'd make my decision. If it IS 'sandable' {even if
you have to do it gently with course paper to prevent 'gumming'} I'd apply a
thin coat of CORRECTLY mixed epoxy, then lay in a layer of Dynel. This is
NOT like f'glass. It WON'T become clear, but will still look somewhat white.
Also without several more coats of epoxy it won't be perfectly smooth.
However these are NOT BAD points for a white deck - it won't show and will
add traction. PLUS the stuff is VERY abrasion resistant.

On the remark about the 'surface grinder' . . . Yes, this is a very useful
tool - I have three of them. In your case I would not choose this first -
look at the smaller, 'straight-line' BELT SANDERS with adjustable speed.
MUCH more controllable, much more sanding material in contact with the
surface, less tiring in use, and an all-around more multi-functional tool.

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop



wrote in message
ups.com...
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the

resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two

to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or

go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.




Brian D June 16th 06 07:53 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Jay,

I just thought of something ...is there any chance that the core material
that you are using is incompatible with epoxy? Was it designed to be a core
for polyester fiberglass structures? Is it polystyrene? If so, be aware
that sometimes epoxy won't cure when in contact with certain other
materials. Any chance you can do a test with properly mixed epoxy to see if
the stuff will cure? System Three has an epoxy that's designed for
surfboards that will cure on a variety of substrates that others won't. If
you run into problems, then something like that may be your answer ...with
more testing that is.

And when you say the tent is 'hot', I'd ask "for how many hours a day". For
example, I've got a small repair going on a boat outside the shop right now
(Oregon), but the weather has been cool and damp. Sure, it gets up to 70
during the day, but only for a couple of hours and then it cools off all
night and morning long. After several days, the medium-speed epoxy is still
'green'. I know it'll cure and if I get room in the shop today then I'll
pull the boat in, but epoxy is like growing corn. For a cure, you need to
count how many hours ABOVE a critical temperature you get. Your slow
hardener will be even worse unless the temperature is even higher... like
80+.

Keep us updated ...this is interesting stuff.

Brian


wrote in message
oups.com...
I am sure I will give the partly cured epoxy a bit more time to cure.
I am not particularly enthusiastic about removing it. But I will only
give it until the end of this month. You see. The temperature inside
the tent (where the boat is) is high. I don't believe cold temperature
has anything to do with this problem. Therefore, the chance is high
that the epoxy may never cure completely. I can afford to wait because
I have something else to do anyway. But at the end, I have a feeling
that I will have to remove it.

I don't quite understand why I should use Dynel instead of regular
fiberglass cloth. Is there any particular reason why Dynel is better
suit for this situation? Thanks in advance for any follow-up info.

Glad to learn that I can use a belt sander instead of a surface
grinder. I already has a belt sander with coarse sanding belt. This
means I am all set if I need to use a power tool to remove the partly
cured epoxy.

Jay Chan


Ron Magen wrote:
Jay,
It's kind of like hypothermic death in the cold climates . . . 'Your not
dead until you are WARM and dead . . .'.

Absolutely - there IS a chemical structure difference between Poly and
Epoxy. However if time is no problem I wouldn't limit the 'wait time' to
a
week. In addition I would 'add energy to the reaction' by applying heat.
There are a couple of simple ways to do this, depending on the area in
question. a}Throw a tarp over the area, then an electric blanket set on
'LOW' or 'Medium'. b} set up a 'long board' or 'panel' with several
simple
sockets for light bulbs. Place it SAFELY & CAREFULLY in the compartment
below the deck area. Use 100w or less bulbs. {I use arrangements like
this
when building in the colder months - with the hull upside down and a tarp
thrown over & hanging down to trap the heat, and with a 'drop cord' in a
Styrofoam 'cooler' to keep the epoxy components warm}.

Once there is NO MORE apparent hardening {after a total of about 30-days
or
by 'scratch test'}, then I'd make my decision. If it IS 'sandable' {even
if
you have to do it gently with course paper to prevent 'gumming'} I'd
apply a
thin coat of CORRECTLY mixed epoxy, then lay in a layer of Dynel. This is
NOT like f'glass. It WON'T become clear, but will still look somewhat
white.
Also without several more coats of epoxy it won't be perfectly smooth.
However these are NOT BAD points for a white deck - it won't show and
will
add traction. PLUS the stuff is VERY abrasion resistant.

On the remark about the 'surface grinder' . . . Yes, this is a very
useful
tool - I have three of them. In your case I would not choose this first -
look at the smaller, 'straight-line' BELT SANDERS with adjustable speed.
MUCH more controllable, much more sanding material in contact with the
surface, less tiring in use, and an all-around more multi-functional
tool.

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop



wrote in message
ups.com...
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the

resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and
you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or
two

to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else
or

go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still
can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.





Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe June 18th 06 08:50 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.

Also thanks for the suggestion of using a surface grinder. I will look
for it in home center.

Jay Chan


If you get a 4" (or so) angle grinder that runs at about 10,000 rpm and a
wire wheel that is designed to go with it - it will make glass and epoxy
disappear real fast and doesn't clog like sand paper or grinding disks. You
can get a cup style brush or a wheel style brush - both work.
I have a 4" Makita that runs at 11,000 rpm - Works great.

Eye protection and all that... Make sure the wheel is rated for the grinder
speed. Even the "correct" brush will throw wires regularly - stay protected.
And, these things will remove flesh as fast as they remove glass...

--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate.



[email protected] June 18th 06 09:12 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Thanks for the suggestion of using an angle grinder with wire wheel to
remove uncured epoxy. I already have an angle grinder. I will look
for a wire wheel attachment. I may use it to remove most of the stuff,
and then use a ramdom oribital sander when I get close to the thin
inner skin of the deck.

Jay Chan

Capt. Geoffrey Thorpe wrote:
wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.

Also thanks for the suggestion of using a surface grinder. I will look
for it in home center.

Jay Chan


If you get a 4" (or so) angle grinder that runs at about 10,000 rpm and a
wire wheel that is designed to go with it - it will make glass and epoxy
disappear real fast and doesn't clog like sand paper or grinding disks. You
can get a cup style brush or a wheel style brush - both work.
I have a 4" Makita that runs at 11,000 rpm - Works great.

Eye protection and all that... Make sure the wheel is rated for the grinder
speed. Even the "correct" brush will throw wires regularly - stay protected.
And, these things will remove flesh as fast as they remove glass...

--
Geoff
The Sea Hawk at Wow Way d0t Com
remove spaces and make the obvious substitutions to reply by mail
When immigration is outlawed, only outlaws will immigrate.



[email protected] June 19th 06 04:42 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Now, this is 17 days since I put the epoxy on the deck. I can feel
that the epoxy is more solid than just a couple days ago (my nail still
can leave a mark though). I am more hopeful than before that the epoxy
will eventually cure. I just need to give the epoxy a bit more time
and the coming hot summer will also help. I will let people know how
this goes.

Jay Chan


Brian D wrote:
Jay,

I just thought of something ...is there any chance that the core material
that you are using is incompatible with epoxy? Was it designed to be a core
for polyester fiberglass structures? Is it polystyrene? If so, be aware
that sometimes epoxy won't cure when in contact with certain other
materials. Any chance you can do a test with properly mixed epoxy to see if
the stuff will cure? System Three has an epoxy that's designed for
surfboards that will cure on a variety of substrates that others won't. If
you run into problems, then something like that may be your answer ...with
more testing that is.

And when you say the tent is 'hot', I'd ask "for how many hours a day". For
example, I've got a small repair going on a boat outside the shop right now
(Oregon), but the weather has been cool and damp. Sure, it gets up to 70
during the day, but only for a couple of hours and then it cools off all
night and morning long. After several days, the medium-speed epoxy is still
'green'. I know it'll cure and if I get room in the shop today then I'll
pull the boat in, but epoxy is like growing corn. For a cure, you need to
count how many hours ABOVE a critical temperature you get. Your slow
hardener will be even worse unless the temperature is even higher... like
80+.

Keep us updated ...this is interesting stuff.

Brian


wrote in message
oups.com...
I am sure I will give the partly cured epoxy a bit more time to cure.
I am not particularly enthusiastic about removing it. But I will only
give it until the end of this month. You see. The temperature inside
the tent (where the boat is) is high. I don't believe cold temperature
has anything to do with this problem. Therefore, the chance is high
that the epoxy may never cure completely. I can afford to wait because
I have something else to do anyway. But at the end, I have a feeling
that I will have to remove it.

I don't quite understand why I should use Dynel instead of regular
fiberglass cloth. Is there any particular reason why Dynel is better
suit for this situation? Thanks in advance for any follow-up info.

Glad to learn that I can use a belt sander instead of a surface
grinder. I already has a belt sander with coarse sanding belt. This
means I am all set if I need to use a power tool to remove the partly
cured epoxy.

Jay Chan


Ron Magen wrote:
Jay,
It's kind of like hypothermic death in the cold climates . . . 'Your not
dead until you are WARM and dead . . .'.

Absolutely - there IS a chemical structure difference between Poly and
Epoxy. However if time is no problem I wouldn't limit the 'wait time' to
a
week. In addition I would 'add energy to the reaction' by applying heat.
There are a couple of simple ways to do this, depending on the area in
question. a}Throw a tarp over the area, then an electric blanket set on
'LOW' or 'Medium'. b} set up a 'long board' or 'panel' with several
simple
sockets for light bulbs. Place it SAFELY & CAREFULLY in the compartment
below the deck area. Use 100w or less bulbs. {I use arrangements like
this
when building in the colder months - with the hull upside down and a tarp
thrown over & hanging down to trap the heat, and with a 'drop cord' in a
Styrofoam 'cooler' to keep the epoxy components warm}.

Once there is NO MORE apparent hardening {after a total of about 30-days
or
by 'scratch test'}, then I'd make my decision. If it IS 'sandable' {even
if
you have to do it gently with course paper to prevent 'gumming'} I'd
apply a
thin coat of CORRECTLY mixed epoxy, then lay in a layer of Dynel. This is
NOT like f'glass. It WON'T become clear, but will still look somewhat
white.
Also without several more coats of epoxy it won't be perfectly smooth.
However these are NOT BAD points for a white deck - it won't show and
will
add traction. PLUS the stuff is VERY abrasion resistant.

On the remark about the 'surface grinder' . . . Yes, this is a very
useful
tool - I have three of them. In your case I would not choose this first -
look at the smaller, 'straight-line' BELT SANDERS with adjustable speed.
MUCH more controllable, much more sanding material in contact with the
surface, less tiring in use, and an all-around more multi-functional
tool.

Regards & Good Luck,
Ron Magen
Backyard Boatshop



wrote in message
ups.com...
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:
I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the
resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and
you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
oups.com...
Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or
two
to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else
or
go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still
can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.




Mik June 20th 06 05:23 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping. Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen. Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.




[email protected] June 20th 06 03:55 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping. Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen. Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.



[email protected] July 6th 06 03:44 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping. Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen. Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.



[email protected] July 6th 06 03:46 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Actually, I counted the number of days wrong. I should have said that
now is 32 days (instead of 22 days) after I put the epoxy in place.

Jay Chan

wrote:
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping. Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen. Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.



[email protected] July 20th 06 02:04 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
After 45 days since I put the epoxy in place, the epoxy has _finally_
cured completely. Seem like those two very hot days in the beginning
of this week really helped the curing process. The outdoor temperature
of those two days was 97 degree+, and the temperatur inside the boat
cover probably was above 110 degree.

Just try to let people know in case someone runs into the same
situation as I was. Then he can decide whether he really wants to wait
that long for the epoxy to cure, whether he should expect his local
weather will help or hurt the curing process, and whether he should
work on something else while he is waiting for the epoxy to cure.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Actually, I counted the number of days wrong. I should have said that
now is 32 days (instead of 22 days) after I put the epoxy in place.

Jay Chan

wrote:
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping. Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen. Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.



Jim Conlin July 20th 06 03:14 AM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Jaykchan-
Unless you have done some tensile tests on your epoxy, and have found that
its strength equals the manufacturer's published figures, your statement
that it has cured "completely" is unfounded. Further, it is the height of
irresponsibility to suggest that others listening here might rely on the
approach you've taken. In my view, you've rolled the dice and whether your
boat holds together remains to be seen. Please don't suggest that others
take the same risk. Lives could be at stake.

wrote in message
oups.com...
After 45 days since I put the epoxy in place, the epoxy has _finally_
cured completely. Seem like those two very hot days in the beginning
of this week really helped the curing process. The outdoor temperature
of those two days was 97 degree+, and the temperatur inside the boat
cover probably was above 110 degree.

Just try to let people know in case someone runs into the same
situation as I was. Then he can decide whether he really wants to wait
that long for the epoxy to cure, whether he should expect his local
weather will help or hurt the curing process, and whether he should
work on something else while he is waiting for the epoxy to cure.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Actually, I counted the number of days wrong. I should have said that
now is 32 days (instead of 22 days) after I put the epoxy in place.

Jay Chan

wrote:
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably

more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He

said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the

fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the

epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will

wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as

much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured

properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping.

Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing

all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen.

Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case

on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and

epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in

the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules

and you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured

epoxy and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be

very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week

or two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something

else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail

still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.





Brian D July 21st 06 05:40 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
You're a patient man, Jay! I've been following along as things have
progressed and am very glad to hear that your epoxy finally made the mark.
Note that even properly mixed epoxy takes something like 2 months or longer
to reach full strength, approaching the mark in an asymptotic way ...90% of
the strength within a few days, 100% of the strength in a couple of months.
But either way, glad to hear of your good results!

Brian



wrote in message
oups.com...
After 45 days since I put the epoxy in place, the epoxy has _finally_
cured completely. Seem like those two very hot days in the beginning
of this week really helped the curing process. The outdoor temperature
of those two days was 97 degree+, and the temperatur inside the boat
cover probably was above 110 degree.

Just try to let people know in case someone runs into the same
situation as I was. Then he can decide whether he really wants to wait
that long for the epoxy to cure, whether he should expect his local
weather will help or hurt the curing process, and whether he should
work on something else while he is waiting for the epoxy to cure.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Actually, I counted the number of days wrong. I should have said that
now is 32 days (instead of 22 days) after I put the epoxy in place.

Jay Chan

wrote:
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably
more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will
wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as
much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured
properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping.
Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing
all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen.
Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case
on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in
the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and
you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy
and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be
very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or
two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something
else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail
still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.





[email protected] July 21st 06 05:58 PM

Remove or Not Remove Partially Cured Epoxy?
 
Thanks for reminding me that the epoxy will not reach full strength for
months to come. I will go easy on the area. From the slow pace that I
have been working on the boat, I doubt there will be a lot of people
standing on the deck any time soon. Oh well...

Jay Chan


Brian D wrote:
You're a patient man, Jay! I've been following along as things have
progressed and am very glad to hear that your epoxy finally made the mark.
Note that even properly mixed epoxy takes something like 2 months or longer
to reach full strength, approaching the mark in an asymptotic way ...90% of
the strength within a few days, 100% of the strength in a couple of months.
But either way, glad to hear of your good results!

Brian



wrote in message
oups.com...
After 45 days since I put the epoxy in place, the epoxy has _finally_
cured completely. Seem like those two very hot days in the beginning
of this week really helped the curing process. The outdoor temperature
of those two days was 97 degree+, and the temperatur inside the boat
cover probably was above 110 degree.

Just try to let people know in case someone runs into the same
situation as I was. Then he can decide whether he really wants to wait
that long for the epoxy to cure, whether he should expect his local
weather will help or hurt the curing process, and whether he should
work on something else while he is waiting for the epoxy to cure.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Actually, I counted the number of days wrong. I should have said that
now is 32 days (instead of 22 days) after I put the epoxy in place.

Jay Chan

wrote:
Now, this is 22 days after I put the epoxy in place. The epoxy is
definitely more solid than on late June. I feel safe to have my hope
high. The epoxy is curing very slowly. Luckily, I am working on
mounting an air conditioner next to my boat; therefore, time is not
wasted.

Jay Chan


wrote:
Yesterday, I checked the epoxy, and I found that it was noticably
more
solid than two or three days ago. I have a feeling that it will
eventually cure completely -- just very slowly.

I have contacted the tech support of the epoxy manufacturer. He said
that the epoxy mostly likely will eventually cure because of the fact
that the curing is progressing. More importantly, he also said that
the cured epoxy will have a good bond despite the fact that the epoxy
will take much longer time to cure than normal. Therefore, I will
wait
a couple weeks for epoxy to cure completely.

Jay Chan


Mik wrote:
If I was you, I'd wait a couple of weeks til it seems to harden as
much
as possible. Then, I'd start scraping. Sicne it hasn't cured
properly,
you can try a heat gun to soften up the epoxy before scraping.
Paint
scrapers, window scrapers, utility knives, 40 grit sandpaper. Try
everything, except a garden rake....

Seriously. Especially since this is structural, I'd be removing
all of
the epoxy, down to bare wood, and starting over. cured epoxy is
fantastic, but partially cured is a disaster waiting to happen.
Why
ruin a good boat over some bad epoxy??

Mike
Saskatoon, SK

wrote:
Thanks for pointing this out. Sound like I have a hopeless case
on my
hand. OK, I just have to treat it as a learning experience.

Jay Chan


derbyrm wrote:

I think there's some confusion between polyester resin and epoxy.

As someone else pointed out, with polyester, the hardener is a
catalyst/accelerator and the resin will eventually cure.

As I understand epoxy, it is the combination of the chemicals in
the resin
and those in the hardener. Too few of the hardener molecules and
you'll
never end up with actual epoxy, only with a slurry of cured epoxy
and
uncured resin molecules looking for their mates. It will not be
very
strong.

I'd suggest you start scraping.

Roger (sorry)

http://home.insightbb.com/~derbyrm

wrote in message
groups.com...

Glad to hear that there is some hope. OK, I will wait a week or
two to
give it a chance. Meanwhile, I can always work on something
else or go
fishing on a rental boat. If after two weeks my finger nail
still can
make a dent on the epoxy, I will remove it.





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:41 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com