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I guess what i ment by tack was that I dry fitted the cloth before epoxying the sides to make sure it fit. I am applying epoxy under then laying the cloth down just as you were saying.
Did the other side this morning in 3 pieces overlapping by like three inches or more. Waiting to start on the flow coats with filler for easier sanding.
ben,
a little sanding of the glass on high spots before new coats can level some pretty bad inconsistencies. the fairing, and primer filler later on with further hide things. sanding is really what will level stuff. my old beat fir panels looked like crap when i first got them. heavy checking, pieces missing. i had to pull old rub rails, screw holes, and top ply damage. the glass and fairing covered it all and it looks great now. the visqueen or saran as a peel ply can also hide some bad stuff if you use faired epoxy under it...thats if you need to cover a seam or overlap that didn't come out that great. you can see why it may be smart to preglass side panels while they are flat now. the screw holes patch quick and easy with fairing/silica and then getting a mirror finish probably is quick and efficiant.
again...sanding, fairing, more sanding, mabye even more fairing touchup, primer filler, more sanding, wet sanding, more primer, more wet sanding, then paint. by the time you get there most hi spots will be gone. and it doesn't take as long as it sounds. the panels are small. you can sand a whole side with an oribital and then leveling by hand in about 1/2 hr or less. once you get to wet sanding primer for paint prep, things go quick because you really are polishing stuff by hand and wet sanding goes fast. you see where you need to concentrate your efforts once you get that far too. then just keep priming and wet sanding til you have a nice neat smooth surface to paint on. then give her hell with the oil enamel. use automtove primer or the oil primer sister product for the paint you are using. auto primer dries way fast. also, you may want to mask your top and bottom 1" so that you have nice epoxy surfaces without paint or primer to epoxy your outside gunnel and bed the chine batten. we need more pics dude =)
chris
you want to dry sand the faired sides. start at 100, move up from there 150 to 200 max. start with the orbital to level any high spots, then get as level as possible on the rest of the panel. come back and hand sand with long horizontal strokes. again try and level any high spots. if you have some spots that are low spots that show up, some back and do little patches of fairing, again...dry sand and level.
once things are looking pretty good with that, you are ready for the primer filler. spray the whole boat good and let it dry.. auto primer dries way fast..no need to worry about sanding it while its wet, it'll take like 30 min to be ready to go. once you have the first coat of primer filler, you should be able to see any inconsistencies in the fairing better now. hit any big high spots with dry sanding..orbital first and then by hand..start with rough paper and move up from there. whack those spots you sanded with more primer filler. now you are ready for wet sanding. start with 200 grit wet dry and hand sand the whole panel..round orbital strokes first, then long horizontal. try to use this to level the primer out. you will prob sand to glass in a few places. come back finer 400 grit mabye and do a quick wet sand. if it still looks a little rough you can do another coat with the primer filler and wet sand more. if its level, just give the boat a quick blast with some straight primer and come back and give it a quick sand with 200 and then 400 wet dry...try to smooth the last primer coat out so that it is smooth and fine but covers all the glass.
you should now have a very smooth and well prepped surface for painting. i described the differant methods for painting...you'll probably want to use a super low knap foam trim roller..there are nice ones at the paint store. if you are familiar with rolling teqnique, you can get a nice finish without any lines with just the roller..remember...super super long straight strokes and even pressure. you may have better finish results taking a good quality paint brush and "tipping off" the paint after you have rolled it. again here you want to use long straight even strokes. start at the front and one nice long stroke all the way to the back. if you have to come off the brush stroke, slowy relieve the pressure on the bristsles with making the stroke, until the brush comes off...this will hide the end of the stroke so you dont have lap marks and just tip the paint off so it has good even texture.
also, remember what i said about the boat building addiction? once your boat is done, all you want to do is build another. terry is obviously already suffering from such syndrome. i would take him up on his offer for help if he is local to you based on the looks of his finished craft.
When I fiberglass a side panel I tape the glass to the bottom panel, letting it overhang down the side. The glass covers the entire panel.
I mix epoxy (small quantities) and pour it into a shallow pan. Then I use a 1/8 nap roller (the yellow ones) and pick up epoxy and start wetting out the cloth. Start in the center and work towards the ends. Once the cloth is wet-out I squeegee off the excess epoxy. Also, I put a coat of epoxy on the plywood panel and let it cure, and sand lightly before the laying out the glass. Using that technique you won't have a problem with epoxy starved glass/plywood interface.
There are several approaches to accomplishing each of these tasks, and most builders adopt methods that suit their personal whims.
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