Re: Rather than sanding...
By:Roy Morford
Date: 6/29/2001, 11:05 am
Date: 6/29/2001, 11:05 am
In Response To: Re: Rather than sanding... (Jim Pace)
: Usually 12-24 hours. This was in the winter so shop temps were in the 60's
: and the epoxy (MAS slow cure) stayed green a little longer. Just to
: clarify, when I used a regular scraper like one of our beloved 'Harbor
: Freight specials' with the interchangeable blades, I would sometimes get
: smeary streaks. A cabinet scraper, however, filed to a flat 90 degrees and
: burnished to a nice sharp edge would slice nice and clean.
: Jim
Thanks Jim, the secret seems to be in using sharp tools. Now how many times have I seen that before and why hasn't it sunk in yet?
Messages In This Thread
- glass cloth unravelling
mark stevens -- 6/28/2001, 1:12 pm- Re: glass cloth unravelling
Doug K. -- 6/29/2001, 11:10 am- Re: glass cloth unravelling
mark stevens -- 6/29/2001, 5:33 pm
- Re: glass cloth unravelling
Tom Jablonski -- 6/28/2001, 2:07 pm- Re: glass cloth unravelling
mark stevens -- 6/28/2001, 3:15 pm- Rather than sanding...
Brian Nystrom -- 6/28/2001, 3:14 pm- Re: Rather than sanding...
Jim Pace -- 6/28/2001, 5:41 pm- Re: Rather than sanding...
Roy Morford -- 6/28/2001, 7:30 pm- Re: Rather than sanding...
Jim Pace -- 6/28/2001, 11:36 pm- Re: Rather than sanding...
Roy Morford -- 6/29/2001, 11:05 am
- Re: Rather than sanding...
Rob Macks -- 6/28/2001, 10:26 pm - Re: Rather than sanding...
- Re: Rather than sanding...
- Re: Rather than sanding...
Rob Macks -- 6/28/2001, 4:32 pm - Re: Rather than sanding...
- Rather than sanding...
- Re: glass cloth unravelling
- Re: glass cloth unravelling