Fiberglass glue questions.

Started by Cherry Tree, December 13, 2021, 08:35:17 AM

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Cherry Tree

How much space do you leave for your hose in a fiberglass recurve glue up? I recently had a delamination started at the tip so I pulled it apart with no pressure and the entire limb came apart (glass to wood) it appears to be super dry no visible glue really. New design and ive never had this happen before I did get laminations from a new source but everyone speaks highly of him here and I asked what the moisture content was. I glue both sides of every lamination so its always wet to wet. Just wondering what my problem might be if my hose had to much pressure or moisture I always assume is the problem. Or my heat box got to hot and made the glue to thin and squeezed out? Any thoughts appreciated

Jeff Freeman

My hose is right around an inch space, 60# pressure. I always check my hose the day before for leaks before  glue ups. JF
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Cherry Tree

I do #60 of pressure and run 7/8s to 5/8s in the center of the riser and tapered back out to 7/8s.

Jeff Freeman

That sounds good. Must have a moisture problem
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Shredd

  There is a chance that one of the lams could be contaminated... Some say that wood oxidizes over time and should be freshly sanded before glue up...

   What kind of wood was that lam??  How did you prep the wood and glass ??

  I personally like to use just over 35# psi...  In any epoxy instructions I ever read it always says to not clamp too tight... It needs space to work properly and is not like wood glue...  Flem vacuums his bows and gets by with 12 to 14 psi...

Cherry Tree

Only prep i do is wipe it with a dry rag and let all laminations sit in hot box for 15mins before gluing. Hard maple was the wood.

Shredd

  I wipe my glass with acetone...  Which I think is a must...

Bvas

First off, thank you for not giving the suppliers name when the cause of failure is unknown.

I sand all glue surfaces right before glue up. Then blow them off with the air compressor. I would recommend against wiping with a dry rag. Epoxy works by filling voids. Wiping with a rag will imbed any dust into the voids needed for adhesion.
Some hunt to survive; some survive to hunt

kennym

Glass doesn't adhere as well as wood, Chad Holm made me aware of this when he said he peeled the glass off a D/R longbow and put new glass on it.  I checked this on a failed test bow and it peels pretty easy.  No fix on that that I know of, but it isn't common for one to fail like that.

I run 70 lbs in my hoses ,so don't think thats it.

Was it clear glass so you could see any glue dry spots?

I make space on D/R bows 1 1/8 to 1 1/4 inches, the hose needs to be elliptical , not round or dogbone shaped.  Recurve would be a little less for thinner limbs.

Pressure strip used?

Not sure if the heat would thin the glue out , but doubt it.

Wish I could give you a definite answer, but it's hard to tell .
Stay sharp, Kenny.

   https://www.kennysarchery.com/

Cherry Tree

Pressure strip was used. Black glass was used. It just seems super dry you can tell the wood took some of the glue but still is very dry looking. Does everyone use acetone for glass?

What is everyone's method of regulating tempature?

Jeff Freeman

No acetone, maybe sometimes denatured. Bingham Temp limit switch on 4 - 150w bulbs. Off 180° on at 145-50°
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Cherry Tree

Okay thats what I use. Seems like there should be a better option.

And I will add the bow failed before I even sprayed it I was doing final sanding and making sure I like the grip and limb alignment and it popped free. Like I said never had this happen and I do make bows regularly and have for years..

Flem

I stopped wiping wood with solvent, fresh sanded surface and blow with DRY compressed air.I do wipe the glass with Al or acetone.

Noah70

I use 60-70 PSI in the hose, always run a sheet of 80 grit once down the wood and air blow, and wipe the glass with alcohol.  Never had a delamination...yet.  Only thing I can think of is that the lamination was contaminated - oil or wax, or something that impaired the glue from bonding, and most of it squeezed out.
Any man who lives within his means clearly lacks imagination

Flem

Noah, do you really live in Nelson?? 
That is the one of the nicest, most beautiful places I have ever been!
I'm so envious, I don't think I am going to be able to sleep tonight
:notworthy: :notworthy: :notworthy:

Noah70

Even better, I'm about half an hour up the road, on the shore of beautiful Kootenay Lake! Truly one of the best places in a province that has more than its share of stunning scenery. As long as you like mountains, that is. I'm very lucky to live here, and appreciate it every day!
Any man who lives within his means clearly lacks imagination

Noah70

That being said however, Montana certainly ranks right up there as well!
Any man who lives within his means clearly lacks imagination

Cherry Tree

I appreciate everyone's input. I always avoided blowing my lams off with a compressor due to the potential moisture from it. While on the subject what does everyone think moisture content should be of all wood parts?

Jeff Freeman

You blow off your wood. Put on a moisture filter on your air blower. They are about 2 1/2 diameter plastic. They work great. JF
🦌🏹😃

Jeff Freeman

Here is one similar to what I use. JF
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