what is wrong with this, air pockets on a flat surface with tight seal


what is wrong with this, air pockets on a flat surface with tight seal
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koko
koko
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Thank you dravis, I'm working on a new part following the suggestions. will give a feedback after.Smile
Dravis
Dravis
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Hi koko ...

Did you use GC50 as gelcoat on these parts too?   See your other thread on "clouding of GC50"

Btw... experience tells me that GC50 goes "milky" on "inside" surfaces exposed to air for a longer period, and if it delaminates, the result is the same..

I Coated a mould with CG50, then did not have time to finish with the epoxy wet lay planned, so the GC50 got left in the mould for 2 weeks in my workshop  Ermm

I had to remove it from the mould and start over...

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Edited 11 Years Ago by Dravis
koko
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Thank you with your comments. This also happened in a small part (side mirror) that I was doing. I have attached a photo.
1st I will try to slow infuse it still with vinyl ester resin. 
I will also try with epoxy resin. I will give a feedback after. 
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Edited 11 Years Ago by koko
andygtt
andygtt
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I had this happen when it was a very hot day, resin over the entire peal ply but hadn't soaked through entire fabric... it was because the resin had started to 'gel' while still flowing through the part thus just flowed over it rather than through it.
Hanaldo
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To be honest, I don't think the issue is air. I think the issue is you are using vinyl ester resin. You can't infuse polyester or vinyl ester in the same way as you do epoxy, because it outgasses. Are you using a vacuum regulator? In the few vinyl ester infusions that I have done, I find this sort of thing always occurs if I infuse at full vacuum. You need to use a vacuum regulator to lower your vacuum level so that the gasses don't expand as much and leave these sorts of voids. 

I'll be honest, I was only ever able to improve my results, never perfect them. I gave up on using the styrene based infusion resins for this reason, so I work exclusively with epoxy now. 
Warren (Staff)
Warren (Staff)
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Only partially open the line clamp on the resin feed. That throttles it.

Warren Penalver
Easy Composites / Carbon Mods - Technical Support Assistant
koko
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When the resin enters the infusion mesh its fast during the 1st half, after the 2nd half the resin slows down specially after exiting it and into the fiberglass cloth. How do you slow down the resin anyway? Thank you
muxiamandy
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I agree with Warren, Had the same problem, slowing down the feed solved the problem.
koko
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Hi Warren, thank you for the reply. I have given the resin enough time to flow thru. Did you see my 3rd pic? Resin is has accumulated on the peel ply on the whole part. Another thing, In the middle of the infusion a lot of resin is building up on the silicon connector on the infusion side. Thank you
Warren (Staff)
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If the bag is good, then allow a bit more resin in.  Alternatively, slow the infusion down to give the resin more time to saturate the fabric as it goes.

It is quite easy to shoot across a panel and it looks done but hasnt fully soaked through with thicker laminates.  Also you can suck out too much resin sometimes.

Warren Penalver
Easy Composites / Carbon Mods - Technical Support Assistant
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