I'd recommend fibre glass work (or painting) onto a existing surface / component is undertaken when the outside temperature is stable for sometime, or even falling. If it is rising after a colder spell there is a tendency for a (microscopic, if not visible) layer of moisture to condensate from the new warmer air touching the cooler surfaces.
Andy
New member - new owner
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- AndrewWebber
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- Model: Elite S1 503, Plus 2, Europa '
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- Location: Kent
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- Model: Excel SE
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Re: New member - new owner
Andrew - thanks for this advice. It looks like the entire week (for me, near Tenby, Pembrokeshire), is looking much much warmer so was going to leave it to the end of the week (shed does get hot) so any moisture has come out (for the most part). No one is going to see it (especially after I've raptored it both sides once I've finished) but I still want to do a proper job on them.
I've got help too on this - have a friend that comes and helps (er, he does it all whilst I hand him various tools he barks at me for!). Neither of us have used fibreglass before so we're going to do the test run on the front lip before tackling the crash panels.
I've got help too on this - have a friend that comes and helps (er, he does it all whilst I hand him various tools he barks at me for!). Neither of us have used fibreglass before so we're going to do the test run on the front lip before tackling the crash panels.
- AndrewWebber
- Senior Poster
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Mon Nov 15, 2021 14:21
- Model: Elite S1 503, Plus 2, Europa '
- Colour: Gold
- Year: 1979
- Location: Kent
Re: New member - new owner
Good plans, moisture is the principle enemy, air entrapment the secondary one.
Andy
Andy
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Re: New member - new owner
Get enough nitrile gloves, wearing two pairs at a time can be usefull when the outer pair becomes to much of a mess. Don't touch anything you don't want to become stickyOi_Oi_Savaloy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 07, 2023 08:52Andrew - thanks for this advice. It looks like the entire week (for me, near Tenby, Pembrokeshire), is looking much much warmer so was going to leave it to the end of the week (shed does get hot) so any moisture has come out (for the most part). No one is going to see it (especially after I've raptored it both sides once I've finished) but I still want to do a proper job on them.
I've got help too on this - have a friend that comes and helps (er, he does it all whilst I hand him various tools he barks at me for!). Neither of us have used fibreglass before so we're going to do the test run on the front lip before tackling the crash panels.
To glue in the panels mix up a goey mess of epoxy and filler, then patch over with precut strips of glass
Re: New member - new owner
I had my Excel completely resprayed with new trims etc and that cost in the order of £5,000