Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Flying Pig" wrote in message
... "Wilbur Hubbard" wrote in message news.com... Skippy, you may have dallied too long on the hard. Rainy season has finally started and where you are you can now expect some rain, often heavy rain, just about every afternoon. What kind of resin are you using for the patches? I hope Epoxy resin as polyester resin is an open invitation to more blisters. But, you'd better mix it in an air-conditioned room. Why? http://msdssearch.dow.com/PublishedL...romPage=GetDoc Can you say hygroscopic. IOW if you mix it in a humid atmosphere you will be adding unwanted moisture to your laminate the result of which will be more blisters. Wilbur Hubbard Hi, Wilbur (I'm using this character name as it's the one which addressed me, but now that you've called yourself out recently, even though I knew it before, it lets me know the intellect and temperament behind the post), We are using West System epoxy for all the fiberglass work. It's not the Dow product you referred me to, and has some significant differences, including shelf life, among others. Polyester is a monomer and only marginally suited to layup as relates to water prevention; vinylester, being a polymer and crosslinked as well as, therefore, being much more water resistant, being much better and not much more bother to work with - but they didn't know about that in the time that my boat was built. Epoxy (also a polymer) is the worst to work with, but superior to vinylester for waterproof characteristics, but we had no layup to do - just little patches. In the couple of places where we needed buildup, it was 1/4" strand chop, with a bit of 703 (I think that's the number) West glass thickener to the degree needed to hold it in place in some volume (a section of the stern of the keel, e.g., was about an inch we wanted to fill-and-build due to many prior sandings having taken off the "wrapper of glass on that edge, along with a slight blister-chase for a 2" length section on the starboard side). All the filled areas (trailing edges as above) as well as the bottom and front of the keel will get a couple of layers of 1708 plus a layer of 3/4oz mat to build it back up to original. The area of the bottom of the keel which dug a 2-foot hole in the limestone shelf during our wreck will get a couple more layers of mat, as well, mostly for symmetry, as it's literally rock solid (the lead ingots, shaped to the interior, were surrounded by an epoxy/marble-dust slurry prior to closing the keel cavity, thus putting marble/epoxy directly under the fiberglass and over the lead). In any event, it's essentially finished, other than just a couple of places we want to add some more. Following that will be AdTech fairing compound, which is also 100% epoxy, but particularly tolerant of many lousy conditions, being milspec. Sanded while green (anything between about 4 and 24 hours from application), it's a piece of cake, if laborious due to the square footage we'll be sanding. After that (which likely will leave a significant skim layer on top of the non-repair areas, anyway/also), we'll be laying on 30 or more mils of epoxy barrier coat, after which we'll do the bottom paint. I really doubt that, absent a fairly significant ding, any water will be able to find its way to the underlying polyester layup - and, as we've exposed and removed all that was readily available, it would be an incredible game of chance for that ding to find someplace which hadn't already been addressed or voided of WSMs. After all this time since the steam pressure washing, we've not had the first hint of additional WSM exudation so, while there may well be areas we didn't find which are not completely laminated, buried deep somewhere in the hull, I doubt very seriously we'll have any blistering in the future. Indeed, we had none when we hauled here. It wasn't until our sander guy took off not only all the bottom paint, but the barrier coat and a fair amount of fiberglass, that we saw our small weep points. Chasing them with the grinder, followed by the keep-it-soaked-under-pressure-washing (not nearly the velocity, volume or temperature of the steam guy, but it obviously helped), as proven during the steam cleaning, did the trick for any which was available. As to the rainy season, ya, we know. Fortunately, we should be able to get a great deal done - apply fairing in the AM, wet sand in the PM :{)) Thanks for thinking of us... Skippy, Thanks for the information. In spite of my usual bluff and bluster and sarcasm I do wish you guys the best of luck with your repairs and refit. What you've done with the bottom certainly can't HURT. I just hope it rewards you with diminished future blisters. You are one of the few people capable of not taking too seriously a bunch of crap directed your way. To me that says 'intelligence'. It also says 'sense of humor' as well as 'self-confidence'. Would that more here shared those wonderful and necessary attributes. Wilbur Hubbard |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
HEAD, for boat with no HEAD. Wag Bag question .. | Cruising | |||
My HEAD, is killing me because my HEAD on the boat isn't legal | Boat Building | |||
Falling in ... | ASA | |||
Falling in | ASA | |||
First the Draft now this? The sky is falling, the sky is falling | General |