Unimould mould repair


Author
Message
LaxFriedrichs
LaxFriedrichs
Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 58, Visits: 450
I had a pattern in a mould that I believed was mechanically locked. Since all was lost, I wanted to remove the pattern and do a thorough postmortem. 

To attempt this I made cuts into the flanged portion as pictured below.

http://www.talkcomposites.com/Uploads/Images/b812df10-c5e0-477d-840c-850e.gif


The 2mm wide cuts reduced the rigidity of mould slightly, and to my surprise the pattern could be removed!!!BigGrin


The mould seems to be pretty good, EXCEPT flange damage - the 2mm wide cuts, hacksaw holes, and loss of some gelcoat at hacksaw holes!!Blush

How do you recommend I repair it? It's still extremely rigid and strong, it just has to cope with a vaccuum bag...

Thanks!
Edited 12 Years Ago by LaxFriedrichs
carboncactus
carboncactus
Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 243, Visits: 1K
Do you have a photo to look at?

http://www.talkcomposites.com/Uploads/Images/db628ad5-e0e7-47b9-873a-3d84.png
LaxFriedrichs
LaxFriedrichs
Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 58, Visits: 450
carboncactus
carboncactus
Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 243, Visits: 1K
I see.

wipe the general area with acetone, then apply some glecoat, maybe in a cooler temperature. Make sure it gets in the crevices. Put a bit of cling film over it so it cures hard. On the other side, back it with some glass. Once cured, flat it back.

http://www.talkcomposites.com/Uploads/Images/db628ad5-e0e7-47b9-873a-3d84.png
LaxFriedrichs
LaxFriedrichs
Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 58, Visits: 450
Thanks I will get cracking on this when it's a little cooler. 

Also, I know it's a little late but is there a ballpark figure for the amount of flange required for vacuum bagging?
carboncactus
carboncactus
Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)Supreme Being (1.8K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 243, Visits: 1K
Depends. If its quite a straightforward, flatish shape, you can get away with 20mm. The more complex the shape, the more the cloth will have to drape, pull, expand and contract. This makes the excess material vary quite a bit, you hac have large bits hanging, which will need relief cuts. For these shapes maybe around 50mm. If its infusion, 100mm or more.

http://www.talkcomposites.com/Uploads/Images/db628ad5-e0e7-47b9-873a-3d84.png
LaxFriedrichs
LaxFriedrichs
Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)Supreme Being (418 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 58, Visits: 450
Thanks Carbon Smile I should have enough room - hopefully...
Joe
Joe
Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)Supreme Being (2.6K reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 310, Visits: 1.5K
Hi, 

I heared about repairing gelcoat (unimold, at least) with "wax additive", as opposed to cling film. 

We can see that in one of the bonnet video the EC staff made. 

Anyone could explain that? Thx. 

 



 


    A $1000 electronic device will always protect a 10 cents fuse
wojtepanik
wojtepanik
Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)Supreme Being (755 reputation)
Group: Forum Members
Posts: 102, Visits: 582
Joe (20/10/2013)
Hi, 

I heared about repairing gelcoat (unimold, at least) with "wax additive", as opposed to cling film. 

We can see that in one of the bonnet video the EC staff made. 

Anyone could explain that? Thx. 
When gelcoat cures on the air some chemical reaction makes gelcoat tacky even chen fully cured and was additive makes gelcoat not tacky even if cured on air.
Wojtek from Poland 

~~~Everytime I hear sound of demoulding part I have eargasm~~~
Warren (Staff)
Warren (Staff)
Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)Supreme Being (22K reputation)
Group: Administrators
Posts: 2.5K, Visits: 8.5K
What happens is the wax in the additive comes to the surface of the gelcoat forming an airtight barrier thus the gelcoat can fully cure hard.

Warren Penalver
Easy Composites / Carbon Mods - Technical Support Assistant
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