Could you please tell me the full name of gel coat you use. And name of factory that produce it. (I can't find it in stores in my country so I could try to find it on online stores). And what do .you use to prevent gel coat to stick on mould. Thank you
I'm on a project of building a bicycle frame. I decidet to make a model of bike, and then make a mould as described in your compilaton of videos. (I'd make two halfs of mold - later this would became 2 half base out of carbon fiber, in which I'd later add some more layers of carbon). However I'd need some advices how to make a proper mold. Should I use gelcoat?
Hi, It is important to use the gelcoat as this will prevent exposure of the fibres, deterioration of the mould surface, eliminate pinholes and give a surface which can be rubbed to a smooth Finnish and buffed to a shine. Unfortunately i am limited by youtube character count but you can visit our website shown at the end of this video then click on projects and scroll down to making Moulds this will give you some interesting literature on the full process.
HI We have these available in our online store please see website address at the end of this video or click the link on our channel. on the website you will find these in section - ancillary items - containers and mixing - catalyst dispensers.
A melamine faced board is best to use for any flat areas as the gelcoat and fibreglass release quite well from this, just a light wax and buff of mould release wax is required on this type of board, we use duratec suface primer to seal our timber plugs then coat with release agent as demonstrated, glass can be used but must be waxed a few times first. most plastics should be coated with several coats of PVA release agent to protect them agianst melting from the styrene in the polyester resin.
A 2-3inch (50mm - 70mm) overlap is usually sufficient although if applying multiple layers of fibreglass it is better if you can butt joint the glass and make sure that the joints on following layers are in a different place each time.
great vid. maybe a dumb question: do you want to have an overlap of fibreglass when adding a new section? i suspect you do, so is there a preferred amount of overlap?
Hi again, Using Scott Baders 14pa Tooling Gelcoat and leaving it to harden at the recommended timescale fibre print through is non existent, using a good quality (Owens corning) 300g matt m705 grade is a lot easier to work with and forms a better bond to the Gelcoat than surface tissue. On the latest video it shows this actual mould in production, no evidence of any print through on gelcoat and over a couple of thousand lifts successfully. hope this helps explain, have a good day.
hey man, i'm just doing a little project at school on catamarans. i was just wondering if there's somewhere you know that i could find out the process of actually making one of the floats? Preferably one made from GRP.
Its just a matter of preference, lots of companies spray on gelcoats which benefit production on a large scale for example boat hull moulding, we find that moulds or jobs of this size that we can apply a gelcoat faster than it would take to set up and clean the spray gun, also it cuts down the energy costs of running compressors. If a product requires a strict thickness of gel this would also warrant the use of a spray gun, we actually supply a low maintenance sprayer the G100.
shouldn't you be adding fiberglass to the inside of the mold? with the mold layer you kinda just made the part bigger...
chittychad18 1 year ago
@chittychad18 Hi This is not a part this is the process of making the actual mould from a plug
Kind rgds martin
ecfibreglassuk 1 year ago
Can I use any cloth to fiberglass,like cotton or does it have to be fiberglass cloth?
thisboi1 1 year ago
@chittychad18 can I use any cloth to fiberglass with?
thisboi1 1 year ago
please help i use gelcoat but he make brush marks ?!! waht i will do ?
robotmotor 1 year ago
Muito legal o trabalho
almirlima07 1 year ago
Could you please tell me the full name of gel coat you use. And name of factory that produce it. (I can't find it in stores in my country so I could try to find it on online stores). And what do .you use to prevent gel coat to stick on mould. Thank you
kingoftheput 1 year ago
Hi I have heard that applying tooling gel by brush can cause shrinkage, is this correct?
no1rickshawracer 1 year ago
the 14PA we use is designed for brush application - usually
thinning gelcoats down with styrene to make them sprayable leads to higher
shrinkage and more tendancy to pre release.
Viny ester gelcoats contain more styrene compared to conventional Iso or
Iso / NPG types so can be more likely to pre release particularly if
applied too thickly in corners etc.
Rgds ecfibreglassuk
ecfibreglassuk 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
What the fuck is he making
juansmith100 1 year ago
whats the song?
tomiboykitt 2 years ago
song by Mark Ransom
Song:Stride
Album:Stride
rgds ecfibreglassuk
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
This has been flagged as spam show
"song by Mark Ransom"
What?!! You mean we are listening to Ransom Notes?!!
skepticoz 1 year ago
Hi lads,
I'm on a project of building a bicycle frame. I decidet to make a model of bike, and then make a mould as described in your compilaton of videos. (I'd make two halfs of mold - later this would became 2 half base out of carbon fiber, in which I'd later add some more layers of carbon). However I'd need some advices how to make a proper mold. Should I use gelcoat?
by the way, your videos are very usefull!
OPUSHAK 2 years ago
Hi, It is important to use the gelcoat as this will prevent exposure of the fibres, deterioration of the mould surface, eliminate pinholes and give a surface which can be rubbed to a smooth Finnish and buffed to a shine. Unfortunately i am limited by youtube character count but you can visit our website shown at the end of this video then click on projects and scroll down to making Moulds this will give you some interesting literature on the full process.
Kind rgds ecfibreglassuk
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
where could i get a squeeze bottle like the one you have for your resin hardener?
Mouglie7 2 years ago
HI We have these available in our online store please see website address at the end of this video or click the link on our channel. on the website you will find these in section - ancillary items - containers and mixing - catalyst dispensers.
Kind rgds ecfibreglassuk
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
hey whats a good work table to build the mold on.. could wood be used, plexy glass, glass? great vids by the way
DILUSI 2 years ago
A melamine faced board is best to use for any flat areas as the gelcoat and fibreglass release quite well from this, just a light wax and buff of mould release wax is required on this type of board, we use duratec suface primer to seal our timber plugs then coat with release agent as demonstrated, glass can be used but must be waxed a few times first. most plastics should be coated with several coats of PVA release agent to protect them agianst melting from the styrene in the polyester resin.
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
A 2-3inch (50mm - 70mm) overlap is usually sufficient although if applying multiple layers of fibreglass it is better if you can butt joint the glass and make sure that the joints on following layers are in a different place each time.
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
great vid. maybe a dumb question: do you want to have an overlap of fibreglass when adding a new section? i suspect you do, so is there a preferred amount of overlap?
friggydiggy81 2 years ago
nice work . well you please tell me what kind of glue you use on fiber mat.
5006944 2 years ago
This is Optimould tooling resin. best rgds
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
Do you think you'd be better off using a layer of tissue first
slap4monk 2 years ago
Hi again, Using Scott Baders 14pa Tooling Gelcoat and leaving it to harden at the recommended timescale fibre print through is non existent, using a good quality (Owens corning) 300g matt m705 grade is a lot easier to work with and forms a better bond to the Gelcoat than surface tissue. On the latest video it shows this actual mould in production, no evidence of any print through on gelcoat and over a couple of thousand lifts successfully. hope this helps explain, have a good day.
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
nice work.... and nice music...what the name..
logreversalge 2 years ago
Good video good info :)
TekkHakk 2 years ago
hey man, i'm just doing a little project at school on catamarans. i was just wondering if there's somewhere you know that i could find out the process of actually making one of the floats? Preferably one made from GRP.
thanks a lot
thatadamkid92 2 years ago
why don't you spray the gel coat?
tomounit23 2 years ago
Its just a matter of preference, lots of companies spray on gelcoats which benefit production on a large scale for example boat hull moulding, we find that moulds or jobs of this size that we can apply a gelcoat faster than it would take to set up and clean the spray gun, also it cuts down the energy costs of running compressors. If a product requires a strict thickness of gel this would also warrant the use of a spray gun, we actually supply a low maintenance sprayer the G100.
rgds ecfibre
ecfibreglassuk 2 years ago
very very nice man
alalaty 3 years ago
very gd write up! thanks
kopking10 3 years ago