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#1
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Well, springtime is upon us and my thoughts are focusing on the open
water. How's everyone else lookin'?? I want to install kneeling pads in my canoe and I'm looking for advice. The boat material is Kevlar and the pad material that I already have is Ensolite foam (that blue closed-cell stuff you get in a roll as a sleeping pad). I'd like to know how to cement the Ensolite to the Kevlar?? Thanks ahead for any and all advice. Naturally, Graham |
#2
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![]() "Graham" wrote in message om... Well, springtime is upon us and my thoughts are focusing on the open water. How's everyone else lookin'?? I want to install kneeling pads in my canoe and I'm looking for advice. The boat material is Kevlar and the pad material that I already have is Ensolite foam (that blue closed-cell stuff you get in a roll as a sleeping pad). I'd like to know how to cement the Ensolite to the Kevlar?? Thanks ahead for any and all advice. Naturally, Graham I hope the "blue stuff" you're speaking of is not the old ensolite but the newer material that lasts longer and is less susceptible to UV (can't think of the name at the moment). I use the blue $6 pads REI sells as sit pads (1/2 inch thinkness). I glue 2 pieces together with contact cement to get some real padding and then use just a little contact cement at the corners when I attach them to the boat. I finish the edges with duct tape so I can remove and replace them after they've worn. At one time I used contact cement over a wide area and glued them to the boat, but that was such a pain to remove I stopped doing it. Removing duct tape residue from the boat is so much easier! Good luck. |
#3
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Benn there- done that. The blue stuff will compress so consider starting
out thicker than needed. I would use two layers on the bottom, and then one layer cut out with a large hole in t he middle for a bit of stability. The blue foam has a skin on it that should be removed. 80 grit sandpaper will help here. Stroke in one direction only. As far as glues/cements; I got pretty good results with silicon sealer. Sand down the resin on the kevlar a bit, use the silicon sealer ( clear) and weight it all down with a sand bag. Enjoy. An alternate glue could be Gorilla glue for woodworking, and it is waterproof. |
#4
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![]() "MLL" wrote in message ... "Graham" wrote in message om... Well, springtime is upon us and my thoughts are focusing on the open water. How's everyone else lookin'?? I want to install kneeling pads in my canoe and I'm looking for advice. The boat material is Kevlar and the pad material that I already have is Ensolite foam (that blue closed-cell stuff you get in a roll as a sleeping pad). I'd like to know how to cement the Ensolite to the Kevlar?? Thanks ahead for any and all advice. Naturally, Graham I hope the "blue stuff" you're speaking of is not the old ensolite but the newer material that lasts longer and is less susceptible to UV (can't think of the name at the moment). I use the blue $6 pads REI sells as sit pads (1/2 inch thinkness). I glue 2 pieces together with contact cement to get some real padding and then use just a little contact cement at the corners when I attach them to the boat. I finish the edges with duct tape so I can remove and replace them after they've worn. At one time I used contact cement over a wide area and glued them to the boat, but that was such a pain to remove I stopped doing it. Removing duct tape residue from the boat is so much easier! I guess, but when I'm gluing down knee pads, removability is not on the list of my proiorities. The first time I glued on knee pads, I used a piece of old ensolite: that grey-white stuff we used to sleep on before we discovered Thermarest. The last time I did it, I used some of the newer blue stuff, which is probably what the OP is looking at. First, I spent a day paddling with regular knee pads on, and made a very good observation of where my knees spend all their time (I move around a lot when I'm paddling). Then I cut two very large pads to cover the entire area where my knees travel, and traced them carefully in pencil. I prepped the surface of the boat inside the pencil marks with a brush of toluene, then painted on a thin coating of Bostic. I toluened the bottom of the pads (very lightly) and Bosticked them, too. Then a second coating on the boat and pads. Then I pressed them together, and before the glue could set up too much, I wiped off the traces of pencil and any slop from the Bostic with more toluene. That was about 15 years ago, and they are still going strong. --riverman |
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