oops!
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2007
- Messages
- 12,932
ok....this is a glassing rant.
its -8 c
i am glassing some thru hull holes on the botton of a 30 footer.
i had to punch the holes thru to get out a pair of large sizzors that the manufacturer just "left" in there ratteling around. the hull is 3/4 inches thick.
i have tented the bottom of the hull and am shooting a big propane heater into the tent.
the boat is on blocks.....so its 2 feet off the ground and i have to crawl underneath the boat and into the tent.
in order to glass cold temps like this......you have to use the catylic reaction of the resin to keep the heat going, and chemically bond all the layers of glass.
well......glassing the bottom of a hull while you are underneath isnt so easy....the glass does not like to stay up on the hull and wants to fall down in your face.....especially 4 foot sections of 1708 !
ya gotta lay under the glass ...hold the wet glass up with your hand...knees...feet, while trying to roll the gook on the boat....
i have 3 different 4 foot sections to do......each with 8 layers of 1.5 csm and a layer of 1708 between each layer.
the last section took me an hour to glass....
oh...did i mention you have to catylize the resin hot at 2.4 %. even cold you get 15 mins a batch.
now.....i get to sit here and monitor the temps to make sure the glass does not get too hot while its curing....
all the while waiting to climb back under the boat and grind everything flat so i can gellcoat it tonight.....
oh.....did i mention i have been at this for 13 hours so far......i figgure i got another 3 hours at least.....
why....oh why.......did i decide i wanted to repair boats in a canadian winter
its -8 c
i am glassing some thru hull holes on the botton of a 30 footer.
i had to punch the holes thru to get out a pair of large sizzors that the manufacturer just "left" in there ratteling around. the hull is 3/4 inches thick.
i have tented the bottom of the hull and am shooting a big propane heater into the tent.
the boat is on blocks.....so its 2 feet off the ground and i have to crawl underneath the boat and into the tent.
in order to glass cold temps like this......you have to use the catylic reaction of the resin to keep the heat going, and chemically bond all the layers of glass.
well......glassing the bottom of a hull while you are underneath isnt so easy....the glass does not like to stay up on the hull and wants to fall down in your face.....especially 4 foot sections of 1708 !
ya gotta lay under the glass ...hold the wet glass up with your hand...knees...feet, while trying to roll the gook on the boat....
i have 3 different 4 foot sections to do......each with 8 layers of 1.5 csm and a layer of 1708 between each layer.
the last section took me an hour to glass....
oh...did i mention you have to catylize the resin hot at 2.4 %. even cold you get 15 mins a batch.
now.....i get to sit here and monitor the temps to make sure the glass does not get too hot while its curing....
all the while waiting to climb back under the boat and grind everything flat so i can gellcoat it tonight.....
oh.....did i mention i have been at this for 13 hours so far......i figgure i got another 3 hours at least.....
why....oh why.......did i decide i wanted to repair boats in a canadian winter