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On Fri, 12 Oct 2007 20:39:24 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
wrote: "Alex" wrote: 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.) You might want to contact SikaFlex tech service (Metro Detroit) and ask some of these questions. Lew Years ago I read an article about a British engineering student who built a race car as his "Theses". He wanted the body to fail progressively and ended up gluing the aluminum body panels together using an adhesive made by locktite. You might have a look at their literature. Bruce in Bangkok (brucepaigeATgmailDOTcom) |
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