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Working with the OEM empennage fairing - Photos - Part 2 of 3
The fairing edges didn?t quite sit tight against the underlying clay form so I taped strands of unwaxed dental floss across the splice. This snugged it down on the clay form. I glassed over the dental floss.
![]() I read a good, recent post by DanH regarding working with glass. Thanks Dan!! Having very little experience working with this stuff before, I just did what Dan suggested. As per DanH, I used epoxy and crowfoot glass cloth, two layers. I then brush a nice thick coating of resin on and then put on peel ply. I had never tried peel ply before. ![]() Continued in Part 3 of 3 |
Working with the OEM empennage fairing - Photos - Part 3 of 3
The next morning when I removed the peel ply, I came to realize how important that stuff is. The peel ply makes it all nice and uniform with no lumps, stray fibers or glass weave showing through. A must do step for exterior surface glassing. The photos show the fairing before any surface sanding. Yesterday I started at 8:30 AM and was finished and out the door to my son?s soccer game at 12:30. Maybe this post will help a few other weary RV builder space travelers orbiting the hostile looking empennage fairing planet. Feedback and suggestions welcome.
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WOW!!
Great writeup Brian....thanks a lot...inspiring pictures for all of us "fiberglass challenged" builders.
Thanks again, |
Brian
i hate to notice this now, but did you trim the edges off before you tried to fit the fairing? I actually fit mine last night, and it fit exactly like you posted until I trimmed it. I noticed in your picture that the cut lines seemed to still be stamped on indicating that you might not have trimmed it? Anyways I just kept cutting until it fit. It worked for me. Jarvis |
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