Date: 5/21/2010, 1:30 pm
: Here is another photo of the problem
Good pic. Notice how the bubbles line up with those strips.
Wood is a lovely natural material which contains air and moisture. When you seal that under epoxy you create a pressure cooker. The air and moisture in the wood heat up and expand. If the epoxy is warm and/or soft that expanding air or watervapor can create bubbles just like you have.
Just from storage some strips will have a higher moisture content than others. Or, a board might get wet weeks before it is ripped into strips.
The good news is that when you do repair this area the epoxy now in the wood will provide a superior seal and any moisture that has escaped will not be getting back into the wood--so you won't have the problem again.
Considering the area involved you might want to remove the existing glass with heat rather than sanding. Warm the area with a heat gun or an electric clothes iron (cover the area with a piece of aluminum foil so the iron doesn't get wrecked) then while the area is hot slip a putty knife between the wood and the glass/epoxy.
Good luck with your future repairs.
PGJ
Messages In This Thread
- Strip: repair
buck biscuit -- 5/20/2010, 6:49 pm- Re: Strip: repair
Paul G Jacobson -- 5/21/2010, 3:31 am- Re: Strip: repair *PIC*
buck biscuit -- 5/21/2010, 10:44 am- Re: Strip: repair
Paul G Jacobson -- 5/21/2010, 1:30 pm- Re: Strip: repair
Roger D -- 5/21/2010, 12:07 pm- Re: Strip: repair
Bill Hamm -- 5/22/2010, 12:20 am- Re: Strip: repair
buck biscuit -- 5/24/2010, 12:58 pm
- Re: Strip: repair
- Re: Strip: repair
- Re: Strip: repair *PIC*
buck biscuit -- 5/21/2010, 10:38 am- Re: Strip: repair
Mike Bielski -- 5/21/2010, 1:13 pm- as Don Ho says, Tiny bubbles in the . . .
Paul G Jacobson -- 5/21/2010, 4:50 pm
- Re: Strip: repair
Brian Nystrom -- 5/21/2010, 11:41 am- Re: Strip: repair
Paul G Jacobson -- 5/21/2010, 11:59 am
- as Don Ho says, Tiny bubbles in the . . .
- Re: Strip: repair
- Re: Strip: repair *PIC*
- Re: Strip: repair