I've built master risers to swap Voiles and Hammerheads between skis. The three pair I've made have three different layups, but except for one pair with t-nuts for the Voile, I've tried for "epoxy inserts." This was inspired by the West System/Gugeon Bros claims of a fortified-epoxy set for hardware being stronger than even epoxied wood. So I mixed Cabosil & Milled fibers into the slow-cure epoxy, coated the screws with (TriFlow or WD40) and unscrewed after set. Now, as I go to attach the bindings, I find these molded threads are failing.
I know one thing I did wrong. Too cold. I waited for the warmth of the day, but it was done in my garage and the QCM interview really drives home the need for temperature. Some were so cold, I saw entrapped air bubbles from stirring.
My longer term plan is to re-do all with t-nuts. But, to get skiing with the mounted shims, I'd like a make-do.
Current plan is to: drill out epoxy, refill with fortified and cure at @ 200deg! Then drill and tap with my Tognar drill and tap.
Q--My big question is, has anyone else successfully done something similar and managed to remove and re-attach screws several times (say, 4) in purely fortified epoxy?
Q-- My smaller question is, shouldn't the wet-set/removed thread be as strong as drill&tap? (assuming THAT works!) Just the temp of cure? I'm now thinking the oil coating contaminates the epoxy, extra vulnerable in the low-volume of the molded threads. Shouldn't epoxy resin be as reuseable as p-tex in a factory riser?
Thanks,
Charley