Netters, A couple of topics:
1. Varnish. The only place varnish should be used in modern aircraft building is over epoxy sealed wood that is going to be left natural ("bright" in boatbuilder's terminolgy) and will be exposed to sunlight. The varnish protects the clear epoxy from ultraviolet light. Every other place where varnish was formerly used should instead be protected with epoxy. The epoxy is a much better sealer and allows parts to be epoxy glued after sealing. 2. Vinylester resins. These resins are "prepromoted" at the time of purchase and then are cured with MEKP when used. The problem is that the promoted resins have a short shelf life, after which they will not cure no matter how much MEKP you use. Mike Bundy, the guy that does the tooling and production runs for the certified stuff I produce, tells me that VE resins are prepromoted with cobalt drier and that additional cobalt can be added to "past date" VE resins. He didn't have any ratio figures, but says that a couple of experimental samples should give the correct numbers. Regards, Tracy O'Brien www.tracyobrien.com