Is a cat track essential if using a custom bladder
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Is a cat track essential if using a custom bladder
Hey guys, this is my first thread, after reading just about every thread on the forum over the last few days. I am amazed at the knowledge base here so well done on that.
I ended up here after weeks of trying to find someone to make the board I have designed, hitting brick wall after brick wall and getting quotes that approached the price of a new small car!
I have decided to build myself a press and do it myself, the addiction has kicked in and my thirst for knowledge is raging.
So I plan on having a custom inflatable bladder made up which I think should negate the need for a cat track. Am I correct here or way off track?
I have designed a custom mould with perfectly shaped top and bottom pieces with a 50mm (2") gap. The bladder will travel past the ends of the board by some distance without changing angle so I dont think I will have a problem with lack of pressure at the end of the mould like I see some people were having due to the mould ending too close to the end of the job.
The way I see it I should have no need for a cat track, what do you guys and girls think?
Thankyou.
Leigh in Sydney.
I ended up here after weeks of trying to find someone to make the board I have designed, hitting brick wall after brick wall and getting quotes that approached the price of a new small car!
I have decided to build myself a press and do it myself, the addiction has kicked in and my thirst for knowledge is raging.
So I plan on having a custom inflatable bladder made up which I think should negate the need for a cat track. Am I correct here or way off track?
I have designed a custom mould with perfectly shaped top and bottom pieces with a 50mm (2") gap. The bladder will travel past the ends of the board by some distance without changing angle so I dont think I will have a problem with lack of pressure at the end of the mould like I see some people were having due to the mould ending too close to the end of the job.
The way I see it I should have no need for a cat track, what do you guys and girls think?
Thankyou.
Leigh in Sydney.
- MontuckyMadman
- Posts: 2395
- Joined: Fri Jun 20, 2008 9:41 pm
The cattrack is used to distribut pressure evenly across the ski not longitudinally.
you get a pressure imbalence in the laminate no matter what but it increases at the edges if the bladder overlapps. Look for doughboyshredders posts regarding this ther are diagrams and you will undertand. Too wide and you put extra pressure on the edge area and too small you dont get enough.
if the molds are perfect you could put the bladder under the mold and press that way.
you get a pressure imbalence in the laminate no matter what but it increases at the edges if the bladder overlapps. Look for doughboyshredders posts regarding this ther are diagrams and you will undertand. Too wide and you put extra pressure on the edge area and too small you dont get enough.
if the molds are perfect you could put the bladder under the mold and press that way.
sammer wrote: I'm still a tang on top guy.
Thanks for the fast reply guys.
So it seems that a cat track is a must then, I dont want to bother trying to reinvent the wheel as such if it has already been proven to fail. In that case I can forget the custom bladder and just use 3 lengths of firehose like everyone else seems to do with success.
The mould has a perfect 50mm gap the entire way across which requires the hose to soak up the difference in the boards core thickness so pressing from the back of the mould will not work.
I am fabricating the press frame myself as I am a welder/steel fabricator and having the mould cnc routed.
I will go back and read the threads by doughboyshredder, and I will definately post a heap of pics when I get up and running
So it seems that a cat track is a must then, I dont want to bother trying to reinvent the wheel as such if it has already been proven to fail. In that case I can forget the custom bladder and just use 3 lengths of firehose like everyone else seems to do with success.
The mould has a perfect 50mm gap the entire way across which requires the hose to soak up the difference in the boards core thickness so pressing from the back of the mould will not work.
I am fabricating the press frame myself as I am a welder/steel fabricator and having the mould cnc routed.
I will go back and read the threads by doughboyshredder, and I will definately post a heap of pics when I get up and running
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- Posts: 2207
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 8:25 pm
- Location: Kenmore, Wa USA
Sounds like you're on the right track.
You can go without a cat track, I did for a while, and the skis that came out weren't terrible. But when I added the cat track, my results got way better (flatter bases). The idea is that you'll have purely normal (perpendicular) force on the laminate.
It's also more versatile than getting a custom one-off bladder made that will only work for one board. Trust me, this won't be the only board you make.
You can go without a cat track, I did for a while, and the skis that came out weren't terrible. But when I added the cat track, my results got way better (flatter bases). The idea is that you'll have purely normal (perpendicular) force on the laminate.
It's also more versatile than getting a custom one-off bladder made that will only work for one board. Trust me, this won't be the only board you make.
-
- Posts: 2207
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 8:25 pm
- Location: Kenmore, Wa USA
-
- Posts: 2207
- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2006 8:25 pm
- Location: Kenmore, Wa USA