All Mountain Snowboard for Hard Boots
Moderators: Head Monkey, kelvin, bigKam, skidesmond, chrismp
Mark,
Very nice setup!!!! I've got a few questions for you.
1. What thickness of aluminum did you use? Did you permently attach the aluminum (glue)?
2. is there any hardboard, etc. below the aluminum
3. Did the breather (red stuff in photo) leave any indents on your board. I am used to using the white fluffy stuff but the last time I ordered they sent me the red stuff but I was worried it would leave imprints.
3. Did you have any problems putting the whole mold into the bag? did you need any help.
Thanks
bill
Very nice setup!!!! I've got a few questions for you.
1. What thickness of aluminum did you use? Did you permently attach the aluminum (glue)?
2. is there any hardboard, etc. below the aluminum
3. Did the breather (red stuff in photo) leave any indents on your board. I am used to using the white fluffy stuff but the last time I ordered they sent me the red stuff but I was worried it would leave imprints.
3. Did you have any problems putting the whole mold into the bag? did you need any help.
Thanks
bill
Thanks man.breid19 wrote:Mark,
Very nice setup!!!! I've got a few questions for you.
1. What thickness of aluminum did you use? Did you permently attach the aluminum (glue)?
2. is there any hardboard, etc. below the aluminum
3. Did the breather (red stuff in photo) leave any indents on your board. I am used to using the white fluffy stuff but the last time I ordered they sent me the red stuff but I was worried it would leave imprints.
3. Did you have any problems putting the whole mold into the bag? did you need any help.
Thanks
bill
Took me a second to figure out what aluminum you were talking about.
It's not aluminum, it's formica countertop laminate (aluminum color, and I forgot to wax it ). Nothing below it. I was just very careful with the surface of my camber mold. I skimmed the mold with joint compound and sanded it as well. If I make another mold, I'll most likely skim it with bondo.
I expect the breather will leave a fish scale like pattern. I'm not worried about it, in fact, it may become my trade mark. I'll try to get you a good photo of it when it's out of the bag.
Sliding the mold in the bag is easy! I put a piece of mdf in the bottom of the bag first to slide it in on top of. I did the lay up with one end of the mold set just on the edge of the mdf piece and the other on a saw horse. I layed up the board, put on a peel-ply, the red "breather", and then a sheet of builders plastic tapped just at the end going into the bag first. My friend held the bag open while I slid the mold in. Seal up the end and it's done. With all the extra bag, it finds it's way on to the mold and conforms very nicely.
-Mark
Urethane,.....Hot, nasty, thick @$$ urethane,..... and plenty of it!mattman wrote:what kind of bagging material is that? it seems to conform very well...is it stretchlon?
Here's the other stuff I used:
http://www.jamestowndistributors.com/us ... ion+Medium
http://www.jamestowndistributors.com/us ... ase+Fabric
http://www.jamestowndistributors.com/us ... piral+Wrap
Check out the video. It's pretty sweet. I've been trying to figure out a way to bag a snowboard like that.
No, but I'd like to figure out how to. I guess you could do a traditional layup on the bottom and infuse the top.
The tail block worked great by the way. the transition is totaly smooth. The Formica worked realy well too. I just trimmed a few spots where the glass lapped over the side of the mold and with minimal effort, lifted the board right off. No wax or release agent whatsoever. The base looks so good that the only reason to grind it is to match the edges to it and put some structure on it!
The only thing I'm concerned about at this point is weather or not the top glass wetted out properly. It's cloudyer than I thought it would be.
I'll get some pics up as soon as I figure out where I put my camera. Wait till you see the tip and tail. I transitioned to cap construction for them and they came out way, way better than I had hoped!
The tail block worked great by the way. the transition is totaly smooth. The Formica worked realy well too. I just trimmed a few spots where the glass lapped over the side of the mold and with minimal effort, lifted the board right off. No wax or release agent whatsoever. The base looks so good that the only reason to grind it is to match the edges to it and put some structure on it!
The only thing I'm concerned about at this point is weather or not the top glass wetted out properly. It's cloudyer than I thought it would be.
I'll get some pics up as soon as I figure out where I put my camera. Wait till you see the tip and tail. I transitioned to cap construction for them and they came out way, way better than I had hoped!