: Hi Mark,
: I agree with the others, it sounds like some kind of contaminant.
: What are you using to measure and mix your epoxy? I had the same
: orange peel effect on my first kayak when I used syringes for
: measuring. The large syringes I was using had some kind of
: silicone lubricant inside. Also, what kind of sand paper are you
: using. Some kinds of sand paper contain stearates to prevent
: clogging. I don't know if this causes a problem with epoxy, but
: I know it can cause problems with some kinds of polyurethane
: finishes.
: These next paragraphs are from old posts:
: I use MAS too; it's great for glass wet out, but a bit thin for
: fill coats. To avoid drips in the first place try
: "pre-promoting" your epoxy when doing fill coats. To
: do this, mix your resin with about 20% of the hardener required
: and let it sit for about half an hour. Then mix in the rest of
: the hardener, and apply your fill coat. Your epoxy won't get
: hard while it's sitting there with a portion of the hardener,
: it'll just get thicker. I do this with MAS and it works
: perfectly. It also requires fewer coats to fill the weave.
: I don't like foam rollers, it seems like they just create
: microbubles (foam) in the epoxy. I use a short-bristle roller
: cover like the one that Rick (vk1nf) suggested a while back. The
: center tube is plastic and the bristles are semi-stiff nylon
: about 1/8" long, no foam or nap. The bristles seem to push
: the resin into the glass and keep the glass tight against the
: wood. I still use a squeegee to get rid of excess epoxy, but
: with these roller covers there usually isn't much excess. I buy
: them at Home Depot as adhesive rollers, but you could probably
: find something similar at other stores. These rollers don't
: create foam unless you press hard and roll back and forth
: quickly. I use them for glass wet-out and fill coats as well.
: They do leave some bubbles, but they are big superficial bubbles
: that are tipped-off easily. I have never experienced bubbles
: underneath the glass while using these rollers.
: Pedro Almeida
Rollers work just like those brushes, don't roll back and forth like you'd do painting a wall, only roll them one direction to apply the resin, creates far less bubbles that way. Still need to tip off the surface to eliminate all the bubbles, but it's much faster than doing it all with a brush.
Bill H.
Messages In This Thread
- Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Mark Sheeres -- 3/21/2010, 6:06 pm- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Pedro Almeida -- 3/23/2010, 8:49 pm- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Bill Hamm -- 3/24/2010, 12:48 am
- Classic blush symptoms
Jay Babina -- 3/22/2010, 4:29 pm- Re: Classic blush symptoms
Mark Sheeres -- 3/22/2010, 6:59 pm- Re: Classic blush symptoms
Bill Hamm -- 3/23/2010, 1:31 am
- Re: Classic blush symptoms
- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Brian Nystrom -- 3/22/2010, 9:14 am- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Mike Savage -- 3/22/2010, 5:49 am- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Bill Hamm -- 3/22/2010, 12:12 am- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
wwfloyd -- 3/21/2010, 6:42 pm- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
Kurt Maurer -- 3/21/2010, 7:41 pm
- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters
- Re: Epoxy: Uneven epoxy and little craters