A trick that I taught myself from trying to repair heavy wall coverings in 
new construction when wrapping the sharp drywall corners. I bought a couple 
cheap household irons. On wall coverings using a low to medium heat depending 
on the type of wall covering(ie paper, vinyl, or cloth) i run the iron up and 
down the edge to give it a crease and a memory to the shape. I did the same 
thing on trailing edges and tight corners on wet layups. I let the layup take a 
set and had the cloth as tight as possible 
then I would run the iron over the edges trying to give the glass fibers a 
sharp crease and there by it would also  lay around almost any corner. It also 
works weather it is an inside or outside corner. I would keep track of the area 
and repeat if it started to bubble away from the sub-straight. Be careful of 
the heat as you don't want to melt foam or liquefy the setting epoxy, just 
enough to soften and make it lay flat. Ya all be careful now.
Joe Horton 

________________________________
From: Dan Heath <da...@windstream.net>
Subject: KR> Bends in Fiberglass Construction

Is there a glass that is "the best" at making a 90 degree bend.  I am
assuming BID, but I am also assuming that there is something that is better.



Daniel R. Heath
_______________________________________

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