What started out as a simple patch job has turned into a mess. I was out of
fiberglass resin so went out and bought a new quart of Bondo brand
polyester resin. When I got the can I greased the cap with vaseline to keep
it free.
I needed a flat piece to glass over the old furnace ports so the idea was
to put a piece of matt on piece of glass and embed it with resin. Then when
it sets I could put it in place over the holes. Sounds easy doesn't it?
The first try I laid waxed paper on a piece of glass then fiberglass matt &
poured resin over that. I went real light on the hardener on this one.
After two days it's a gooey mess.
The second try I got a new piece of glass, cleaned it with amonia then
applied the matt and resin directly to it. Only this time I used about a
50% excess of hardener. After 24 hours including and hour in the oven it's
still a gooey mess.
Next I poured a little bit of resin in a cup & added a couple of drops of
hardener. It didn't set after an hour so I took another cup with a small
amount and added several drops of hardener. After 12 hours the last cup is
set but only in the part that was fully mixed.
I've been patching things with fiberglass since the seventies doing
everything from snowmobiles to the transom in my boat and have never had a
problem. The only good part here is that I haven't applied any of this goo
to the GMC.
Has anyone else run into similar problems using fiberglass? I don't think
I'n doing anything out of the ordinary but could use a sanity check.
Dick Kennedy
'75 PB
fiberglass resin so went out and bought a new quart of Bondo brand
polyester resin. When I got the can I greased the cap with vaseline to keep
it free.
I needed a flat piece to glass over the old furnace ports so the idea was
to put a piece of matt on piece of glass and embed it with resin. Then when
it sets I could put it in place over the holes. Sounds easy doesn't it?
The first try I laid waxed paper on a piece of glass then fiberglass matt &
poured resin over that. I went real light on the hardener on this one.
After two days it's a gooey mess.
The second try I got a new piece of glass, cleaned it with amonia then
applied the matt and resin directly to it. Only this time I used about a
50% excess of hardener. After 24 hours including and hour in the oven it's
still a gooey mess.
Next I poured a little bit of resin in a cup & added a couple of drops of
hardener. It didn't set after an hour so I took another cup with a small
amount and added several drops of hardener. After 12 hours the last cup is
set but only in the part that was fully mixed.
I've been patching things with fiberglass since the seventies doing
everything from snowmobiles to the transom in my boat and have never had a
problem. The only good part here is that I haven't applied any of this goo
to the GMC.
Has anyone else run into similar problems using fiberglass? I don't think
I'n doing anything out of the ordinary but could use a sanity check.
Dick Kennedy
'75 PB