Vacuum time


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carbon man
carbon man
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Hi, i have just received my resin infusion kit from ec. Iv worked with carbon for years but not infusion. 

I watched the tutorial video but they didn't really say how long to leave the pump on once the resin pulled through before clamping the line? 

Is it just a case of once all the resin is in the part? Or trial and error. 

Just  a few tips will be appreciated before I have a first attempt. 

Thanks 
VVS
VVS
VVS
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Hi. I'm no expert but have done a few parts now.

few things ive learnt are don't infuse if you got any leaks and most your leaks are at the vac line/bag entry.

regarding clamping I infuse slow as this seems to cause less air bubbles at the inlet clamp, as the resin goes through it starts to bubble up, I open it out to clear the bubbles then slow it back down again and usually have perfectly clear resin going in.

once you start getting resin out the other end its down to you to decide if its pulling clean, generally as soon as it starts coming out in happy to clamp off and then you can run a little extra in from the pot, if it's purely cosmetic give it a good 20 seconds to top everything off, if not 10 seconds.




good luck. 
MarkMK
MarkMK
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Hi there

Putting a resin break of an inch or more in your infusion mesh before the vacuum line will help ensure the part's fully infused and it will naturally slow things down prior to clamping off

If your part appears sufficiently wetted out by the time the resin reaches the vacuum line then it should be safe to clamp, followed by the feed line. However, if you're working on a fairly big mould and there's still some of the waste fabric around the perimeters of the mould still to infuse, I'd leave the feed line open until it looks like the resin has reached everywhere.

I have experienced some resin starvation on the part itself when the resin has struggled to wet-out the very edges of the material that overlap onto the flange, so preferable to see a little resin hit the catch pot unless all the fabric in the mould has infused.
fgayford
fgayford
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MarkMK (10/04/2016)
Hi there

Putting a resin break of an inch or more in your infusion mesh before the vacuum line will help ensure the part's fully infused and it will naturally slow things down prior to clamping off

If your part appears sufficiently wetted out by the time the resin reaches the vacuum line then it should be safe to clamp, followed by the feed line. However, if you're working on a fairly big mould and there's still some of the waste fabric around the perimeters of the mould still to infuse, I'd leave the feed line open until it looks like the resin has reached everywhere.

I have experienced some resin starvation on the part itself when the resin has struggled to wet-out the very edges of the material that overlap onto the flange, so preferable to see a little resin hit the catch pot unless all the fabric in the mould has infused.


Yes using a strip of just peelply as a brake is important. If you clamp off the resin first and then the vacuum you often get pinholes near the vacuum side of your part so you should clamp off the vacuum side and wait for more resin to come in and equalize your part. 10 seconds or so. That is my method.I have a 2 gallon catch pot and often I infuse once I have a full vacuum without the pump even connected to the sealed catchpot. The reserve vacuum in the catchpot is enough and doesn't even drop throughout the infusion.
Fred

GO

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