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Marlin,
There are lots of different epoxies available, but when it comes to doing wood & glass layups for room temperature curing, it is largely a matter of preference. I tend to stick to West Systems because it is the first epoxy I used, I always have some left over stock, and I've gotten used to it's properties. The resin is thicker than some other makes which gives me less dripping and running, and helps when filling the weave to get a smooth finish. The down side is that it takes longer to wet out the cloth, particularly when cool, and it can pull the cloth if you get aggressive trying to squeegee out the excess or work out a bubble.
A lot can be done by adjusting the temperature of the room, the epoxy, or the working surface. I think temperature has much more to do with how well an epoxy handles than any "proprietary formulation". On my first woodstrip canoe, I mixed 2-3 pumps of epoxy into a dixie cup, then put it into a larger cup with ice water in it. The chilled water kept the epoxy from starting to cure for hours. It also thickened it to a very viscous gel. I used a throw-away acid brush to transfer the glue into the cove in the wood strips for edge-gluing the hull. As the epoxy hit the relatively warm wood, it would thin and brush out very nicely. I had plenty of time to position the next strip, staple it in place, and then go on to the next strip. I never had problems with the epoxy going off too early, and I could do about 4 strips at a time. Now I just use yellow glue, but the ice water trick worked great and taught me a lot about how the epoxy handles with temperature.
When wetting out glass cloth, sometimes I'll use a heat gun to thin out the epoxy and speed up wicking into the wood fibers. Keeping your resin and hardener slightly warmer than the room (~90-100 F) really helps with the pumping and mixing. But it also accelerates the curing, so be ready to pour or spread it out soon after mixing to slow it down and keep it workable.
I once saw a canoe with some unsightly white speckles in the cloth. Every place that the warp and the woof of the weave crossed, there was a tiny white spec. It turned out that the epoxy the guy used was just too thick to completely wet out the fabric, and these were minute air bubbles left in the glass. I've heard it said that perhaps the glass didn't have the "right" sizing on it. Commercial fiberglass is sold with a "sizing" that helps it to wet out properly. It is some kind of coating that improves the surface tension, etc. So far, I haven't had any problems with this. I just buy stuff marketed for hand layups from reputable firms. But if the epoxy is too thick, it won't thoroughly wet out the cloth without a lot of extra work with the squeegee. So make sure that you are either using a thin formulation, or that your work area is warm enough. If it just doesn't seem to work easily enough, pull out the heat gun.
It's fun and enlightening to take scraps of glass, wood, and some epoxy and seeing what you can do with it by varying temperature. You can also use heat lamps or just 60-75 watt light bulbs in a portable clamp-on fixture with a reflector (they have 'em at my local hardware store) is sometimes helpful in providing just a little gentle heat in the right place to pre-warm the layup, help in wetting out, or in accelerating the cure.
I've heard that the MAS epoxies work well too, but I don't have any first-hand experience with them.
As for plans... sorry! The 'net is my preferred resource also. If I don't find it there, I don't find it. I don't recognize the name... is this a discontinued model by the current Bell company? They may be willing to sell (or even give!) you the dimensions. If it is a historic model, then you may be able to get some information through the Wooden Canoe Heritage Association (I think that is their name).
If you can find an existing hull, you can also take dimensions directly off of it. There are instructions in various places on how to do this, but in general you will need to be able to set it up on blocks and take off datum points. I haven't tried that before, but it doesn't look to be too difficult.
Your post got me itchin' to make some paddles myself. It will make a good spring project while I wait for the summer trips!
WS
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