heat blankets
Moderators: Head Monkey, kelvin, bigKam, skidesmond, chrismp
-
- Posts: 87
- Joined: Tue Dec 27, 2011 12:02 pm
heat blankets
I am new to ski building and what exactly does a heat blanket do? how is better that a press without heat? thanks
The undeniable advantage is that heat makes the epoxy cure faster. A 4-6hr cure can be turned to 45 minutes. Heat also helps the epoxy cure better, resulting in better mechanical properties. Stronger, more durable, etc.
It has been debated here lately whether the 45minutes of heating during curing is actually doing the second part of that, ie making it stronger. I'm inclined to believe that where the increase in strength really becomes evident is when heat is added as a post-curing process. Ie press until epoxy is hard, then heat for 3-4 hrs after that.
It has been debated here lately whether the 45minutes of heating during curing is actually doing the second part of that, ie making it stronger. I'm inclined to believe that where the increase in strength really becomes evident is when heat is added as a post-curing process. Ie press until epoxy is hard, then heat for 3-4 hrs after that.
-
- Posts: 2207
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 8:25 pm
- Location: Kenmore, Wa USA
It completely depends on the epoxy you are using. Some epoxies cure at room temperature, some require elevated temperatures. Really, most (all?) epoxies will cure at room temperature regardless of if they require heat, but it may take a very long time and you'll have suspect bonding/strength.
I would say that ideally you should be using a heat-cure epoxy (one specifically advertised as being for compression molding), and whatever temperatures the manufacturer recommends. But then again, there are many on here that use room-temp cure epoxies with great results.
Also there is nothing wrong with using heat on a room-temp cure epoxy, it will speed things up and improve wetout (less viscosity), just don't overheat... you don't want the epoxy to cure TOO fast.
I would say that ideally you should be using a heat-cure epoxy (one specifically advertised as being for compression molding), and whatever temperatures the manufacturer recommends. But then again, there are many on here that use room-temp cure epoxies with great results.
Also there is nothing wrong with using heat on a room-temp cure epoxy, it will speed things up and improve wetout (less viscosity), just don't overheat... you don't want the epoxy to cure TOO fast.