I have built a few bows and am very familiar with composite lamination (vac bag, resin infusion etc.) and have a project requiring laminating a few pieces of wood in order to create a tighter radius.
The parts are 4 layers of 3/16" maple 1 1/4" wide and 9" long bent to approximately an 11" radius. The finished part will be subject to a lot of vibration and the choice of smooth-on was based upon the success of using it with bows.
For the lamination in question I weigh up the resin and hardener according to the directions and apply a thin layer to both gluing surfaces. During the clamp up excess resin squeezes out from between the parts so I know there is good wetout and the parts are not resin starved.
After glue-up the parts are placed into a greenhouse which gets to approximately 120F and they remain in the greenhouse under clamp for 48 or so hours.
This morning I went to begin machining the parts to make up the final shape and noticed the pieces looked a bit flat so I placed them back into the molds and sure enough, they are significantly straighter. The parts hold the clamped shape upon removal and there are varying amounts of creep in each part.
If the smooth-on requires a hatbox cure to fuly set and remain tough enough to hold I can do this. I didn't want to run it when the temps seem hot enough to cure and I have had success curing bows at greenhouse temps and have never had any creeping issues.
By comparison, parts made using Tightbond 3 have help up fine but the dried glue is a bit brittle and my hope was the smooth-on will be a better and more durable bond.
Have any of you experienced lamination creep? Any other suggestions or adhesives or ideas of how I might be misusing the smooth-on?