At 08:43 PM 9/6/2009, you wrote:
>Did you do any tests to see if the hard shelling affects the weight of the
>test blocks?
>
>Mike Taglieri
No I did not. I assumed it would take the same amount of micro to
seal the foam whe
Did you do any tests to see if the hard shelling affects the weight of the
test blocks?
Mike Taglieri miket--...@juno.com
Everyone has his reasons.
- Jean Renoir "The Rules of the Game"
The hard shelling worked great for me but do a couple of small test
blocks
>My problem was that I put a micro on to fill in gaps on the foam and
>then tried to sand them smooth with the foam and then I was hitting
>the foam and just making things worse and worse.
> -Kurt
You can't sand anything
Thanks Larry for the hard shelling tip. I am so going to use that. My problem
was that I put a micro on to fill in gaps on the foam and then tried to sand
them smooth with the foam and then I was hitting the foam and just making
things worse and worse. I am glad that you actually tested it too.
The term Hard-Shelling (circa 1980) - is the practice of covering foam with
micro slurry, letting it cure, sanding it and then applying a fiberglass
layup over the top. (not recommended)
I know that someone on the net recommended this, but I would not do it,
because there are too many steps to a
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