Cypress again
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- In Memory of Vicroy
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Cypress again
Just sanded out the bubbles and put another coat of epoxy on....mo bubbles and the heat gun won't get rid of them. So I'll have to sand out this coat too.....how about if I cut the final coat pretty good with alcohol (or something else) to thin it so the bubbles will rise & pop??????
UV, tiring of this......
UV, tiring of this......
- In Memory Walter K
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Vic-I don't know if this helps, but when building rods, one of the things you do when mixing the 2-part flexcote is to let the mixture sit for a short while before applying. The wait allows the bubbles created while mixing, to rise and pop on their own. You still will probably need the heat gun (what I use), but you start off with much less. I also wouldn't hesitate to hit the surface of the epoxy while waiting with the heat gun to expedite the de-bubbling process. Walter
- In Memory of Vicroy
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Walter, thanks....I did that, but the bubbles seem to come from the brush. One problem might be that I'm using the real slow 209 hardener 'cause I had some left over from the hatch project. I am probably the world's most pitiful painter to make matters worse. I'll get a finer hair brush tomorrow, and maybe some foam brushes, try thinning it. If that don't work.........maybe try to polish it out with some rubbing compound and the orbital buffer. A shame, 'cause but for the bubbles it looks great.
UV
UV
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Update.....steel wooled out yesterday's air bubbles, put another coat on this time with a $12 china brush and cut the epoxy about 25% with denatured alcohol.....still some bubbles, but not as bad, plus the bubbles responded this time to the heat gun real well. I'm doing this in my shop in the a/c, say 75 degrees all the time.
Anyway, this is the final coat, plan to let it cure for a couple of days then buff out with the 3M compound & wax and declare victory. Looks plenty good for government work.....
Thanks for all the help, Faithful.
UV
Anyway, this is the final coat, plan to let it cure for a couple of days then buff out with the 3M compound & wax and declare victory. Looks plenty good for government work.....
Thanks for all the help, Faithful.
UV
- CaptPatrick
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Vic,
Glad you didn't ignite the project! Be careful trying to polish epoxy...
Epoxy is a soft surface, even after it's fully cured for a long time, & won't stand up well to the frictional heat of a buffer. Likey to goo up & drag in compound & lint. Mellofhess!
Wet sanding through 1000 grit & hand waxing might give you better results...
Br,
Patrick
Glad you didn't ignite the project! Be careful trying to polish epoxy...
Epoxy is a soft surface, even after it's fully cured for a long time, & won't stand up well to the frictional heat of a buffer. Likey to goo up & drag in compound & lint. Mellofhess!
Wet sanding through 1000 grit & hand waxing might give you better results...
Br,
Patrick
Br,
Patrick
Molon labe
Patrick
Molon labe
- In Memory of Vicroy
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Thanks for giving me the courage to just declare victory and end this debacle, Ole Fart. I'm doing it for Mr. Bill & Miss Janie next door to the camp, and it be done, done, done......let it cure for a day or two, grind off the drips on the underside, and deliver it to them Friday morning with a drum roll. No polishing needed, it looks just fine.
The enemy of good is better.
UV
The enemy of good is better.
UV
UV,
I'm a day late and a dollar short, but if you ever do it again, this worked real well for me.... I cast some seahorses and shells in some casting epoxy once as gifts. This stuff had a pot life of 1.5 hours
After mixing the epoxy in a wide mouth bowl, I put a lid with a 3/4 thru hull on it and sucked on the mix with a vacuum cleaner......then before application I chilled it in the fridge for 20 minutes.
Never had a bubble.
I'm a day late and a dollar short, but if you ever do it again, this worked real well for me.... I cast some seahorses and shells in some casting epoxy once as gifts. This stuff had a pot life of 1.5 hours
After mixing the epoxy in a wide mouth bowl, I put a lid with a 3/4 thru hull on it and sucked on the mix with a vacuum cleaner......then before application I chilled it in the fridge for 20 minutes.
Never had a bubble.
- In Memory of Vicroy
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- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
OK, got the Coonass vacuum de-bubbler assembled....quart glass jar, a plastic transmission funnel all cleaned up with a foam gasket out of an old outdoor light fixture in the big end, fits perfect over the top of the jar, then the shop vac hose fits perfect over the little end.....time to steel wool out the old bubbles and bug tracks, then suck some epoxy....don't even think I'm gonna thin it....the man who invented the bunker buster bomb has my trust...let ya'll know after while.
UV
UV
- In Memory of Vicroy
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