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Cool info, question please
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I heard of micros and flox (and used them both but not together). I have not used cabosil. I googled it, super fine filler of synthetic silicon dioxide. Cool. What are the advantages of cabosil. I never heard of all three in one batch, if that is what you meant. I never mixed flox or micros together either, but that is me. Thanks appreciate the info. |
Flox brings toughness and a moderate increase in tensile strength. Micro just adds lightweight bulk. Cabosil is to make epoxy or epoxy putty thixotropic.
A non-structural filler paste using just flox would be coarse and wouldn't blade into a thin crack very well. Adding some micro improves smoothness and workability, although it does weaken the end product a bit. The cabosil prevents the putty from flowing out of the crack before it can cure. The combination makes a filler putty that blades nice and stay put, then cuts and sands well. |
That is such a clever idea that it almost makes me want to go make a new set of wheelpants Dan.....note that I said "almost" ;)
I love simple and elegant solutions - I did it a hard way! Paul |
Thanks Paul.
Everyone, allow me to put extra emphasis on the part about "scuff the gloss off the flange face". You can't be sure of a good bond to a cured gloss epoxy surface; you must open the surface. You can sand, the usual method; 60 to 100 grit is about right. My personal favorite for a small part is to bead blast, because it is fast. Painting a very light coat of pure epoxy on the fresh surface prior to putty application is the second step in assuring that the cured putty isn't gonna pop off as a chunk some years from now. |
Good goo
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Dan,
You really need a seam gap of ~.050 to allow for paint build-up. As long as the line is straight and gap even it looks fine. Same requirement around all the cowl edges, too. One thing I found is the necessity of using shims to even the surfaces across the seam. There were some places where the front half was .06 and the flange depth .12, so you'd get a nasty step at the seam. Thanks for the additives explanation. Gravity was not my friend while the filler cured. John Siebold Boise, ID |
<<need a seam gap of ~.050 to allow for paint build-up.>>
You mean 0.005"? 1-1/4 millimeters (.050") would be some mighty thick paint. 5 mils is typical for mainline domestic cars. The upscale stuff will be closer to 7 mils. Right now the gap equals the thicknesss of the vinyl tape. <<One thing I found is the necessity of using shims to even the surfaces>> Yep, me too, as many as three plies of 9 oz crowfoot. |
Tape thickness....
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http://www3.3m.com/catalog/us/en001/...er/output_html Good electrical tape is about 7 mills thick.... http://products3.3m.com/catalog/us/e...er/output_html Perhaps two layers of tape would be appropriate for paint clearance, since there are two layers of paint involved... gil in Tucson |
Guys,
I mean .050. These fiberglass parts will need lots of high build primer before you even get to whatever paint system you use. There are two surfaces approaching each other, so the gap gets closed up quite fast. Check with paint shops if you want confirmation. My painter (who's done a lot of RVs) insist on such a gap. How big's the gap on all your car seams? Looks OK, doesn't it. The secret is keeping the gap even. If you aim for .010 after paint but waver .005 in your facing straight edges, your eye will see the 50% variation. Ugly. .005 isn't noticeable if the average gap is larger. John Siebold |
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