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Best Bedding for Fixed Port Light Rebuild - Lurching onto a relatedtopic
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Best Bedding for Fixed Port Light Rebuild - Lurching onto a related topic
On Sat, 13 Oct 2007 01:03:29 GMT, "Alex"
wrote: Could this high-strength, high-grab, somewhat flexible adhesive, or one somewhat similar, be used to build a boat from aluminum panels, somewhat the way epoxy is used for stitch-and-glue with plywood? Alex There was a light airplane built with glued wing panels - they were aluminum as I recall which is still flying in some numbers. So it can be done Brian W |
Best Bedding for Fixed Port Light Rebuild - Lurching onto a related topic
On Sat, 13 Oct 2007 01:03:29 GMT, "Alex"
wrote: "Bob" wrote in message ups.com... Dow COrning 795 aint your grandpa's silicone seal........... think "structural" silicone. Really heavy duty industrial hold twin tower windows in w/o fastners really thick kinda silicone. get their spec sheet and check the lap strength for diffrent materials and strech numbers. I used it when I fabricated my 7"x15"x 3/8" polycarb dead lights. Min DC 795 thickness :1/8". Of course fastned with ten 316L 1/4"x20 PH MS. At the risk of (1) being exposed as a boatbuilding dunce or (2) even worse, starting a thread as hotly contested as the hypotheteical 40' vertical sal****er still, the comment about Dow Corning 795 leads me to ask a (naive) question. Could this high-strength, high-grab, somewhat flexible adhesive, or one somewhat similar, be used to build a boat from aluminum panels, somewhat the way epoxy is used for stitch-and-glue with plywood? I realize there would have to be a lot of modifications to the construction process. But is the concept reasonable with today's adhesives? Certainly DC 795 seems to have no trouble bonding to aluminum. (Dow says 795 is not for use on surfaces continuously under water, so that would be a problem for anything except trailered boats or dinghy-type uses. But again, I'm just raising the question, not proposing it as a real option. And there may be other adhesives that would be OK for underwater applications.) Alex That is how I built my airplane floats. Stiched together with blind rivets and seams sealed with sikaflex 1A construction adhesive. |
Best Bedding for Fixed Port Light Rebuild - Lurching onto a related topic
On Oct 12, 6:03 pm, "Alex"
wrote: "Bob" wrote in message At the risk of (1) being exposed as a boatbuilding dunce or (2) even worse, starting a thread as hotly contested as the hypotheteical 40' vertical sal****er still, the comment about Dow Corning 795 leads me to ask a (naive) question. Could this high-strength, high-grab, somewhat flexible adhesive, or one somewhat similar, be used to build a boat from aluminum panels, somewhat the way epoxy is used for stitch-and-glue with plywood? Alex Good idea..... Years ago I worked at a research oyster hatchery. They used silicone seal to bond 200 gallon glass tanks. The tanks were set into a 2"x4" wood frame. But the glass panes were all bonded with clear silicone seal...... never a failure I would think 5200 might work for a quick boat. I used it to patch all the lose rivits and holes in an 18' Grumman canoe that a bunch of drunk cowboys abused for 10 years. Bob |
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