question gloss finish release agent


Author
Message
brainfart
brainfart
Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)Supreme Being (1.1K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 198, Visits: 1.4K
> it said it got a high gloss finish.. that's why I'm asking

It will reproduce the surface quality of your mould. If your mould has parting lines (which could be considered mould imperfections) then these parting lines will show up on the part. You have to manually remove them if they are visible.
But the rest of the part will have the finish of the mould.

ajb100
ajb100
Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 346, Visits: 4.4K
bip (24/05/2014)
how's the process of applying this easy-lease agent ? 
clean the mould----spray on easy-lease( in dusk free room I guess ) --- wait for 4-5 hours @60 degrees or so to cure ----- lay on prepreg material-- autoclave process 
If this is true then I wounder how the easy lease release agent stick to the carbon ? It should be releasing both side.. the mould part and the carbon part ? 
correct ? 



It is not like a gel coat, it's a release agent like wax, the gloss you keep referring to is transferred from the mould surface, it doesn't stick to the carbon at all. It's saying it won't dull the finish of a part
Edited 10 Years Ago by ajb100
GO

Merge Selected

Merge into selected topic...



Merge into merge target...



Merge into a specific topic ID...




Similar Topics

Reading This Topic

Explore
Messages
Mentions
Search