On Nov 18, 9:17*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote:
On Nov 18, 4:12*pm, Craig wrote:
On Nov 18, 3:35*pm, glider wrote:
*The process is very messy and can be hazardous to your health.
And it takes many, many hours of careful preperation.
*Labor intensive.
*As JJ said, mass balance of controls *is very important.
* 400-1000 hours is possible...no joke.
*Polyurethane may be best way to go.
*GA
Jim Phoenix nicely documented the refinish on his Nimbus 3.http://www.jimphoenix.com/?page_id=42
Heck, anything less than 18m will seem like a cakewalk. *Just don't
plan on having a social life this winter...
Best regards,
Craig Funston
Jim Phoenix reads RAS from time to time, so I'll try not to tell any
lies. *I corresponded with him quite some time ago, about the time I
was re-finishing a small portion of my fuselage with gelcoat.
Regarding the gelcoat vs poly, *I'm pretty sure he said if he had it
to do over again, he wouldn't gelcoat, he'd shoot polyurethane.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I've refinished in both Acrylic Urethane and polyester topcoat
(commonly called "gelcoat'). From my experience, each has it's place.
Gelcoat goes on thick and is tolerant of a lot of sins. Amatuer
spraying skills don't make a disaster. It does get hard and takes
quite a bit of work to sand out and polish. Life expectancy, if done
right and stored properly, should be plenty long.
It is comparatively inexpensive- roughly $500 for a 15 meter glider
for material and catalyst.
AU- I use PPG Concept as suggested by JJ and others, requires
excellent preparation and as perfect a surface as you can get because
it does not have much thickness. Gloss is great and is sands easier
than gelcoat.
BUT. Time and effort, from my experience with both is that the extra
time in prep before spraying AU exceeds the difference to sand out and
polish gelcoat.
AU is outstanding in UV protection and far exceeds gelcoat with
respect to weathering.
AU costs about 2 1/2 times as much as gelcoat.
AU must be sprayed in a safer environment and MUST be done using full
positive pressure protection gear as it contains what is essentially a
nerve toxin(aliphatic isocyanate).
Gelcoat is easier for fixing up that occasional ding.
So- long winded- which to use and why.
We did our ASK-21's in AU because of amount of time in weather and
harder life.
We do others in gelcoat for easier touchup, lower cost , and less
toxic exposure.
If you are going to do one glider one time as a beginner, I would
suggest polyester finish.
JJ likes AU but remember he has a huge amount of experience that a new
person won't have. Choice may well also be affected by availability of
experienced help.
FWIW
UH