Base coat.


Author
Message
oekmont
oekmont
Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)Supreme Being (3.4K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 550, Visits: 27K
In my opinion the best product for this is a polyurethane basecoat. Polyurethanes have much better bonding characteristics in general.

Hanaldo
Hanaldo
Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)Supreme Being (14K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 2.5K, Visits: 28K
Most plastics are pretty difficult for laminating resins to bond to, so there is no real solution. Extremely rough sanding with a 40 or 60 grit paper plus scoring the plastic with a sharp knife will give you the best chance, but there's a good chance the carbon will delaminate and bubble over time, especially with the temperature changes interior components will see.

Not really something I would advise doing, it's just not very reliable.
Alex1981
A
Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)Forum Member (30 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 4, Visits: 23
Hi. What I have to use to stick carbon fibre to the part (plastic skinning ) car interior parts. Try it to use base coat but looks to me not stick well. Used mix 100:40.  I am beginner in this and try in do my first car interior  parts
Thank you  
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