USA Unimold Options


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drxlcarfreak
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Hi guys, first post here. I have been recently looking to make some carbon fiber parts from molds. I have searched around quite a bit and watched a ton of videos and really liked the unimould kit from EasyComposites. The problem is I am in the U.S. and can't justify spending nearly $200USD on shipping alone. I really like the system as it seems to be the most in depth kit I have seen. Is there an option for those of us stateside? Through all of my reading, there seems to be so much conflicting info out there about what material works with what and what doesn't, it would be nice to have a set stack of materials that for sure works so I can spend time working on my skills rather than trying to deal with incompatibilities on top of being somewhat new to composites. Thanks!
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Hanaldo
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You really want to find a vinylester tooling gelcoat. For one, they are higher quality than polyester and will give you a better surface. But most importantly, you are working with epoxy resins, and there is a big risk that using epoxy in a mould with a polyester surface will stick unless you use PVA release agent. 

The tooling resin you posted isnt the same as the Unimould tooling resin, as it is unfilled. You could still use it, but you would want to limit the number of layers you apply in one hit. So instead of doing all 5 backing layers of 450g, you would want to do 2 layers and let that cure for a couple of hours, then do another 2 layers and let that cure again. Then because it is unfilled, you will get less thickness per layer so you may want to do 5-6 layers of 450g rather than 4-5 as you would with Unimould. 

The other two products are perfect, Duratec topcoat is one of my favourite products in the game, and the epoxy infusion resin looks fine.
Edited 6 Years Ago by Hanaldo
drxlcarfreak
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Hanaldo - 1/19/2019 1:51:52 AM
You really want to find a vinylester tooling gelcoat. For one, they are higher quality than polyester and will give you a better surface. But most importantly, you are working with epoxy resins, and there is a big risk that using epoxy in a mould with a polyester surface will stick unless you use PVA release agent. 

The tooling resin you posted isnt the same as the Unimould tooling resin, as it is unfilled. You could still use it, but you would want to limit the number of layers you apply in one hit. So instead of doing all 5 backing layers of 450g, you would want to do 2 layers and let that cure for a couple of hours, then do another 2 layers and let that cure again. Then because it is unfilled, you will get less thickness per layer so you may want to do 5-6 layers of 450g rather than 4-5 as you would with Unimould. 

The other two products are perfect, Duratec topcoat is one of my favourite products in the game, and the epoxy infusion resin looks fine.

Fair enough. I will look more for a vinylester tooling gelcoat. It doesn't appear that this site has it. Do you have a stateside recommendation? I thought that I have read that before about polyester and epoxies, but couldn't find it again when I was looking for it. Though I do plan to use this wax (https://compositeenvisions.com/rexco-partall-paste-2-wax-496.html) and PVA (https://compositeenvisions.com/rexco-partall-pva-10-spray-on-moldrelease-1-gallon-486.html), I would rather not put myself at risk of ruining a mold/part if the PVA coat was too thin!

Hmm, I had assumed that isophthalic and filled were the same thing and limited shrinkage. What exactly is a filled resin filled with? Is that the same as saturated/unsaturated? Do you have a filled polyester resin you can recommend in the states? I would really prefer to do all the layers at once instead of stages

For the Duratec, I noticed that they have three clear options. One Vinylester which seems like it is more for mold surfaces and not part surfaces., and two polyesters. I saw mention on here if the SunShield 904-061, but not the 904-046 Top Coat I linked. I just want to make sure that I grab the correct one. If I am guessing the SunShield would be the correct choice for something that will be outside a lot to give the Epoxy UV protection? Is the 046 a better finish for parts that won't be seeing a lot of sunlight?

Thanks again!

GO

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