ondarvr
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2005
- Messages
- 11,527
Re: Delamination - Transom
The puckering you saw was from the gel coat being under cured in those areas. It can be from being too thin (most likely), under catalyzed or mixed poorly. When laminating resin is applied over the gel coat it will attack the uncured gummy layer on the surface, if the gel coat is too thin it may also be poorly cured and the solvents in the resin will soften and raise the gel coat in those areas.
The steps left out in the video were when they apply a second coat, or at least go back and touch up the thin spots and try to level the surface. Brush marks don?t level and flow like they do in some types of paint, this leaves ridges with thin spots between them.
Using putty in the corners can help to eliminate air pockets, but a thick unreinforced radius can be weak and crack more easily than if the glass follows the contour closely.
Clay can be used to fill defects in a mold, its cheap and easy to work with.
I had some good and some not great results brushing it on, I think waiting too long before applying the first layer of mat was a problem, the tool gel looked like orange peel, it puckered up in places.
I was surprised the guy didn't apply some putty to the corners before the mat, whenever I did that I had air pockets under the tool gel.
I learned you can't do a temp fix on a mold with wax too.!
The resin gets under it or into it somehow.
The puckering you saw was from the gel coat being under cured in those areas. It can be from being too thin (most likely), under catalyzed or mixed poorly. When laminating resin is applied over the gel coat it will attack the uncured gummy layer on the surface, if the gel coat is too thin it may also be poorly cured and the solvents in the resin will soften and raise the gel coat in those areas.
The steps left out in the video were when they apply a second coat, or at least go back and touch up the thin spots and try to level the surface. Brush marks don?t level and flow like they do in some types of paint, this leaves ridges with thin spots between them.
Using putty in the corners can help to eliminate air pockets, but a thick unreinforced radius can be weak and crack more easily than if the glass follows the contour closely.
Clay can be used to fill defects in a mold, its cheap and easy to work with.