I was talking to a friend that builds Drag Cars and consequently uses a fair
amount of fiber glass. He said to try a product called icing. It is a filler
that can be squeeged on and then sanded. It seems to me that with the amount
of coats of smooth prime and sanding that many of us report on, thi
Hi Leigh,
Two things come to mind. First, U.S. Chemical & Plastics "Icing" is a
polyester product. I don't like to mix polyester products with epoxy
products on a project. Other than preferring not to do it one isn't
recommended for use over the other. I can never remember which way it
goe
1:00 AM
To: KRnet
Subject: Re: KR>Filling pinholes
Hi Leigh,
Two things come to mind. First, U.S. Chemical & Plastics "Icing" is a
polyester product. I don't like to mix polyester products with epoxy
products on a project. Other than preferring not to do it one isn'
I found the same thing about smooth prime. The first time I used it, I had
to remove mountains. Then I started thinning it. It doesn't cover as well
thinned, but it does a much better job of filling pin holes and does leave
as many mountains to sand off. I then used a grey filler primer and sti
nt. I think it comes from the same supplier here in Woodinville
Washington that supplies Pro Seal and PPG applications.
Bud Midkiff
Lynnwood, WA
email: c.midk...@verizon.net
- Original Message -
From: "Dan Heath"
To:
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2003 2:49 PM
Subject: Re: KR>Fi
I tried many things w/smooth prime and found that if you used a squeegy
first it seemed to fill better on the first pass. The stuff is good but
not as good as advertised.
On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 17:49:52 -0500 (Eastern Standard Time) "Dan Heath"
writes:
> I found the same thing about smooth prime.
6 matches
Mail list logo