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#1
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Hi!
Can you use stainless steel wire mesh or nylon mesh to reinforce fiberglass? Has anyone ever tried doing so? I was thinking perhaps after pouring the resin, I lay the glass fibers then the wire/nylon mesh, then repeat.... What do you think? |
#2
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#3
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#4
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That's what woven rovin is for! Why re-invent the wheel.
wrote in message ups.com... Hi! Can you use stainless steel wire mesh or nylon mesh to reinforce fiberglass? Has anyone ever tried doing so? I was thinking perhaps after pouring the resin, I lay the glass fibers then the wire/nylon mesh, then repeat.... What do you think? |
#5
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#6
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Oh okay thanks for your inputs.
"But the "pouring in resin" part makes me wonder what the heck you are thinking??? " sorry I didn't literally mean "pouring the resin" I just meant applying it (with a hand brush or squeegee) polyester resin doesn't bond well to glass sheets either, but it does to glass fibers. perhaps the resin would also adhere to thin nylon mesh or a rough surfaced wire mesh would. try applying resin to a nylon or wire mesh and I think it would still be difficult to separate the two. carbon fiber and kevlar is very expensive so I'm just thinking of the possible alternatives. it's just that metal is used to reinforce cement for structures and rubber in tires. just thinking out of the box. it may sound crazy to some people but it's still worth a try. Has anyone here ever tried doing that? On Oct 17, 8:27 pm, wrote: On Wed, 17 Oct 2007 03:23:16 -0700, wrote: Hi! Can you use stainless steel wire mesh or nylon mesh to reinforce fiberglass? Has anyone ever tried doing so? I was thinking perhaps after pouring the resin, I lay the glass fibers then the wire/nylon mesh, then repeat.... What do you think? First of all glass roving is going to be stronger then nylon mesh so using nylon is going to result in a weaker then normal laminate. Second, epoxy resin is not going to bond extremely well to stainless mesh so regardless of the strength of the stainless it may well not contribute to the overall strength of the laminate. Third, by using a combination of glass, carbon fiber and kevlar it is possible to build laminates that are literally bullet proof. Why bother with nylon or stainless? Bruce in Bangkok |
#7
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#8
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... Oh okay thanks for your inputs. "But the "pouring in resin" part makes me wonder what the heck you are thinking??? " sorry I didn't literally mean "pouring the resin" I just meant applying it (with a hand brush or squeegee) polyester resin doesn't bond well to glass sheets either, but it does to glass fibers. perhaps the resin would also adhere to thin nylon mesh or a rough surfaced wire mesh would. try applying resin to a nylon or wire mesh and I think it would still be difficult to separate the two. carbon fiber and kevlar is very expensive so I'm just thinking of the possible alternatives. it's just that metal is used to reinforce cement for structures and rubber in tires. just thinking out of the box. it may sound crazy to some people but it's still worth a try. Generally speaking, when no one does something there is a good reason why. Glass is simply better than wire or nylon. I have used polyester cloth, but that is weaker than glass, but easier. |
#9
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