Back at it again. It was good to take a break, because I am going to try some new products and techniques and I really needed to do some up front troubleshooting. When things get screwed up doing this, its a huge waste of time and materials. And its a good thing I did, because I was able to identify some mistakes I was about to make.
I don't have or would know how to use any modeling or simulation programs, so I have to scribble and try to visualize the process as it will hopefully be happening.
First thing I noticed was that I needed ports in the insulation for the tubing. I also decided to heat the form from the bottom with some green house heat mats. I want to avoid a temperature gradient that might retard the flow at the bottom of the form, which will be the show side of the glass. Epoxy flows better when its warm, but the pot life is reduced. So I'm thinking I will keep the pot away from any heat sources and as the epoxy flows into the form it should disperse and move faster. We will see if thats true
Another thing I changed was my resin infusion point medium. I have previously only used the scotch pad material as an air evac channel, not for diffusion. I don't know if it will get to compacted to flow resin well, so I decided to make a manifold by drilling a bunch of holes in a plastic T. I need the resin to flow in two directions, so hopefully this will avoid any constrictions. I could not find any similar examples to what I am attempting, so I'm a little nervous.
Two of the new to me products I'm trying out are the white tubing and the black cylinder attached to the clear tubing
The white stuff is vacuum line that is encased in a liquid impermeable sleeve. The black cylinder is a pressure balancing valve of some nature. I am hopeful they both work as advertised, because if they do it will eliminate the pressure gradient from inlet to outlet, moderate the resin feed rate and eliminate the need for a resin trap and optimize the epoxy/glass ratio. We shall see!
So this is what the form looks like, ready for a leak test. That reminds me of another new to me product. I using a nylon film to cover the form, rather than a full plastic sleeve as I have in the past. This system uses 75% less plastic, so I really hope it works well.
Getting close! Got the color mixed into pt.A. Looks like neon snot. It's either going to look way cool on a bow, or truly
heinous. I used some basic pantone colors that came in a sample pack from Smooth-On. This color was 30drops of yellow, 1drop of blue and 1drop white. It's very chartreuse in person
Then its getting degassed in this paint pot that got converted to vacuum
Oh Man, I'm starting to get really nervous now.