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fiberglassing aluminum


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masterwacker 
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Posted: September 08, 2004 at 10:05 PM / IP Logged  
Can you fiberglass aluminum?  I want to make an overhead console and I want to use aluminum for structural integrity, but after wrapping in poly fleece will the resin still bond good?
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auex 
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Posted: September 08, 2004 at 10:33 PM / IP Logged  
Can you fiberglass over aluminum, yes. Would it bond well to it, probably not. But the real question would be why would you need to use aluminum to frame it?
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93accordSE 
Copper - Posts: 203
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Posted: September 08, 2004 at 10:47 PM / IP Logged  
Might aswell just use MDF instead of aluminum. If you going for light weight thinking aluminum is lighter, it is but not as strong, and stuff won't stick to it very well.
nuentoter 
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Posted: September 09, 2004 at 9:04 AM / IP Logged  
In actuality the strength of aluminum is very underrated, aluminum if used in the correct way can be as strong as steel. but it has to be put under pressure. bend the aluminum into a channel or flanged box and it is incredibly strong. but practically use mdf, having to construct in alum. will become very tedious because of the excessive bending and fabrication.
dxav 
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Posted: September 09, 2004 at 11:25 AM / IP Logged  
You could rough sand the aluminum to get a texture that fiberglass would stick BETTER, but I don't think it would ever really bond with the metal. When you glass wood, the resin somewhat sinks into the wood (and other subsequent layers) to form a bond.
Just my input....
DXAV
soup 
Copper - Posts: 79
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Joined: October 09, 2003
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Posted: September 11, 2004 at 7:47 PM / IP Logged  
Yes, you can get it to bond to the aluminum. Acid etch the aluminum, or rough it up with sand paper, then go get some epoxy resin, not polyester, and use that. It is completely pointless to do this though.
A.  If you use aluminum for the frame, and then stretch the felt, the resin will soak into the fleece, and you dont need it to bond to the aluminum anyways.
B.   This will cost twice as much unless you have access to aluminum for cheap. The epoxy resin is a lot more expensive than poly, and it is a lot more difficult to work with, smells twice as bad, and is not as forgiving while sanding.
C.  It is an overhead console... why use aluminum? It does not need any integrity. Use popsicle sticks and just one layer of fleece, it is more than strong enough... (don't actually do this... )
dxav 
Silver - Posts: 314
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Posted: September 13, 2004 at 10:54 AM / IP Logged  
Soup,
    Good call on the epoxy, didn't know about the epoxy -- knew it was more expensive though....
Haven't tried the popsicle stick method yet, maybe later today!!
DXAV

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