Yep there is a learning curve with the west, but you you got the playing with it in.....LOOKS GOOD! The epoxy pulled due to the lack of sanding to the edge...try fineline/edging tape next time and the edge will not be so thick as it is when using masking/painters tape.
Posted by: GeoFisher Posted on: May 9th, 2009 at 10:29pm
Did your pot set geof? If It did increase the temps and the epoxy on the hull will set.....If it did not you have a problem and a mess to clean up as you did not mix it correctly.....the slow can be slow when spread thin.....temperature decrease Warm it up and walk away....she'll set. The fast can be super fast depending on the day....have it to slow for your taste is a heck of a lot easier to deal with than having go to fast....gives to time to kick back and enjoy yourself and the work that you are doing
I mixed 4 pots........and all 4 pots setup HARD................so I guess, I'm good, I just have never done this before, and it is driving me nuts.
It is a lot harder today, but still not quit as setup as I though it would be........
We're supposed to get some serious HEAT the next few days, so that should do it.
Thanks,
Geo
Posted by: marlin55388 Posted on: May 8th, 2009 at 12:20pm
It is the gillete type, b4 you coat the the boat with epoxy....b4 the "standers" stand up.....shave that boat it has whiskers ...you might have to sand again to free them up . The set time on the epoxy is being stretched out by the temps.....warm it up and it will go. Yes the west is expensive....but it is tough as H, has the UV, etc. Done the tape thing...IMHO it is easier to shave b4 the epoxy application. I have worked with this system a bunch with the paddles and boats. Did your pot set geof? If It did increase the temps and the epoxy on the hull will set.....If it did not you have a problem and a mess to clean up as you did not mix it correctly.....the slow can be slow when spread thin.....temperature decrease Warm it up and walk away....she'll set. The fast can be super fast depending on the day....have it to slow for your taste is a heck of a lot easier to deal with than having go to fast....gives to time to kick back and enjoy yourself and the work that you are doing
If you mixed it up good and the leftover resin cured correctly don't worry. You put on a thin layer and so are at the mercy of cool nights. Give it a day or three ... set it out it out in the sun when you can.... Everything gets hard eventually.
I did the grip on my paddle in the basement one winter - took at least a week to cure.
Doh! I meant to link to the other thread when I linked it to this one: (You need to Login or Register to view media files and links)
Posted by: GeoFisher Posted on: May 8th, 2009 at 12:30am
If you have trouble with the cutting/shaving kevlar fibers? Remember you can just wet the fuzz with a small amount of epoxy and tape it down with clear box tape. After it hardens, remove the tape and do your larger area coats.