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"GB" wrote in message
... completely ineffective on others, etc, etc. I have a bit of difficulty with the concept of a near-solid (as in almost brittle) epoxy contributing any sort of strength to a butted joint between two bits of ply. I'm not saying it won't work, just that it conflicts with my own experiential knowledge of how things 'work'. Well, take a look at this dinghy: www.customware.nl/boats It is entirely glued together. Not a singe screw and even the skeg (20mm) wide is simply glued to the keel. I once did a test: everone keeps telling me that oak doesn't glue well with epoxy so this was a good starting point for my experiment. I sanded the oak with grit 40 across the grain, applied some epoxy and let it cure without clamping. Next day I drove a 3/16" nail straight through the seam, trying to break the epoxy. It didn't. the wood around the nail gave up eventually. My own exposure to fibreglass is limited to canoe-building class in high school. Those were well before OHS days, so we were all so high on the fumes that there wasn't much consciousness left to develop a feeling for just how strong a fibre-tape/epoxy join might be!!! Epoxy does not produce fumes. You're mixing it up with polyester. Meindert |
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