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#32
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Bob
Thanks for the explanation. Do you think osmosis be a problem with gliders such as the discus or ventus which have a wet wing. Richard Pfiffner "B Lacovara" wrote in message ... I was actually trying to avoid this part of the discussion, but here goes... Interestingly enough, boat hull blistering is not a gel coat problem, but rather a laminate problem. Considering the laminate as a semi-permeable membrane the potential for osmosis can take place. Osmosis is the tendency of a fluid of lower concentration to pass through a semi-permeable membrane into a solution of higher concentration. In the case of boat hulls, water vapor (lower concentration) passes from the inside of the hull to the outside of the hull (higher concentration). The gel coat matrix is denser than the laminate matrix and the transmitted water vapor will eventually collect in what are known as seed sites. These are voids at the gel coat/laminate interface. Eventually, the liquid in the seed sites will become denser that the outside water and the process reverses pulling water in from the opposite direction.. This is where the big nasty boat hull blisters appear. Blistering problems have been solved by the boat or swimming pool industries, because they now use vinyl ester skin coats behind the gel coat. The point is that the problem was solved with a laminate modification, rather than a gel coat modification. The reason I was trying to avoid this discussion, is that this mechanism is not in play in relation to gel coat cracks. Sailplane gel coat, or more likely urethane paint, can blister from osmosis. Just put a glider in a wet fuselage cradle! However, until the seed site is saturated and dense there is no transport of *liquid water*. All the moving H20 is vapor phase. This only happens under very specific conditions. So unless you are going to ride it hard and put it away wet there is absolutely issue with washing a gel coat finish. But even when blistering takes place, there is no relation to typical gel coat cracking. Bob Lacovara |
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