Refurbishing a moulds surface.....using vinyl wrap?


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PAUL S
PAUL S
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I plan to use an old mould in which the surface has seen better days, its chipped in sharp corners etc.

It got me thinking, I can use body filler to repair the damage but this will probably come out with the part when demoulded, or simply fall out anyway as the mould flexes.

So then I thought why not line the entire mould once its been filled and sanded smooth, with the type of film used to wrap cars etc, and use a release agent on top of that, so that the film will flex with the mould when the part is removed, and hold any filler in place in the mould at the same time.

My question is will such wrap material react with the epoxy during the vac process and bond to it or will it remain stable and thus easy to demould afterwards whilst still remaining attached to the mould?

Of course I would de wax the mould before repairing and applying the film.
Edited 6 Years Ago by PAUL S
scottracing
scottracing
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PAUL S - 9/14/2018 9:13:47 PM
I plan to use an old mould in which the surface has seen better days, its chipped in sharp corners etc.

It got me thinking, I can use body filler to repair the damage but this will probably come out with the part when demoulded, or simply fall out anyway as the mould flexes.

So then I thought why not line the entire mould once its been filled and sanded smooth, with the type of film used to wrap cars etc, and use a release agent on top of that, so that the film will flex with the mould when the part is removed, and hold any filler in place in the mould at the same time.

My question is will such wrap material react with the epoxy during the vac process and bond to it or will it remain stable and thus easy to demould afterwards whilst still remaining attached to the mould?

Of course I would de wax the mould before repairing and applying the film.

You would be better using something designed for the job like tygaflor which is a sticky back ptfe sheet sold by tygavac. It aint cheap but its really good.

PAUL S
PAUL S
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scottracing - 9/15/2018 2:59:37 PM
PAUL S - 9/14/2018 9:13:47 PM
I plan to use an old mould in which the surface has seen better days, its chipped in sharp corners etc.

It got me thinking, I can use body filler to repair the damage but this will probably come out with the part when demoulded, or simply fall out anyway as the mould flexes.

So then I thought why not line the entire mould once its been filled and sanded smooth, with the type of film used to wrap cars etc, and use a release agent on top of that, so that the film will flex with the mould when the part is removed, and hold any filler in place in the mould at the same time.

My question is will such wrap material react with the epoxy during the vac process and bond to it or will it remain stable and thus easy to demould afterwards whilst still remaining attached to the mould?

Of course I would de wax the mould before repairing and applying the film.

You would be better using something designed for the job like tygaflor which is a sticky back ptfe sheet sold by tygavac. It aint cheap but its really good.

Thanks, not heard of that before, will give it a google.

Be interested to hear though if the vinyl used in such wrap products would remain stable and not bond to the epoxy though if anyone knows?

Lester Populaire
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PAUL S - 9/14/2018 9:13:47 PM
I plan to use an old mould in which the surface has seen better days, its chipped in sharp corners etc.

It got me thinking, I can use body filler to repair the damage but this will probably come out with the part when demoulded, or simply fall out anyway as the mould flexes.

So then I thought why not line the entire mould once its been filled and sanded smooth, with the type of film used to wrap cars etc, and use a release agent on top of that, so that the film will flex with the mould when the part is removed, and hold any filler in place in the mould at the same time.

My question is will such wrap material react with the epoxy during the vac process and bond to it or will it remain stable and thus easy to demould afterwards whilst still remaining attached to the mould?

Of course I would de wax the mould before repairing and applying the film.

I have done that before but it's certainly not optimal as the surface ain't perfect and it gets damaged quite easily. So for a one of it works, but for more than one part I would refurbish the mold with some tooling gel coat.

PAUL S
PAUL S
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Thanks for your input, that is good to know. I only need to pull one or two parts for now, so may give it a try as an experiment.

I agree though, longer term a tooling coat, or a two pack paint with  flex additive is a better option no doubt
GO

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