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View Full Version : Looking for an Eberle trailer door


SoaringXCellence
August 10th 16, 06:40 AM
All,

I have an Eberle trailer for my Glasflugel H301. Everything works well for me and I have sentimental reasons for keeping all the bits close to original setup.

When I got the glider the front door of the trailer was gone and a plywood monstrosity was covering the hole; functional but hideous.

I'm looking for a replacement door. From what I've seen, all of the Eberle trailer have the same front end and door.

Does anyone know of a trailer that is no longer functional but has a good door? How about a good door that I can pull a mold from (I have many years working in FG and will promise not to damage your door).

Any ideas, available doors or other pointers would be appreciated.

(I know that there is a listing on W&W for a trailer, but I'd rather not buy a whole trailer for just the door).

Contact me at cirrus cfi (all one word) using a gmail account.

Mike
N7161
4M

August 10th 16, 06:17 PM
I have had success in making small fiberglass parts using epoxy over foam method. I'd get a 4x4x1" sheet of closed cell pink foam from Homedepo (don't use open-cell styrofoam because it doesn't sand well),heat shape it to the gentle curve of the front of your trailer, then sand in a nice radius all around using a long sanding block. Then lay-on 3 layers of 6oz cloth orientated 45 degrees from vertical. You must use epoxy because boat resin eats styrofoam. After curing, trim the edges and dig out the foam.........or, just leave it there, except where the hinges and handle goes. Fill and paint.........seems like I remember having a red door on my Eberly.
Have fun,
JJ

August 10th 16, 06:38 PM
On Wednesday, August 10, 2016 at 1:17:33 PM UTC-4, wrote:
> I have had success in making small fiberglass parts using epoxy over foam method. I'd get a 4x4x1" sheet of closed cell pink foam from Homedepo (don't use open-cell styrofoam because it doesn't sand well),heat shape it to the gentle curve of the front of your trailer, then sand in a nice radius all around using a long sanding block. Then lay-on 3 layers of 6oz cloth orientated 45 degrees from vertical. You must use epoxy because boat resin eats styrofoam. After curing, trim the edges and dig out the foam.........or, just leave it there, except where the hinges and handle goes. Fill and paint.........seems like I remember having a red door on my Eberly.
> Have fun,
> JJ

Further to JJ technique:
If I want the "mold" to go away, I do the following:
After shaping, cover the entire surface with masking tape as smoothly as practical. Overlaps don't matter.
Wax the heck out of the resulting surface.
Do lay up.
Peel and scrape the foam out after curing.
This is an easier clean up than trying to get foam crap off the layup.
Good Luck
UH

Martin Gregorie[_5_]
August 10th 16, 08:25 PM
On Wed, 10 Aug 2016 10:38:21 -0700, unclhank wrote:

> On Wednesday, August 10, 2016 at 1:17:33 PM UTC-4,
> wrote:
>> I have had success in making small fiberglass parts using epoxy over
>> foam method. I'd get a 4x4x1" sheet of closed cell pink foam from
>> Homedepo (don't use open-cell styrofoam because it doesn't sand
>> well),heat shape it to the gentle curve of the front of your trailer,
>> then sand in a nice radius all around using a long sanding block. Then
>> lay-on 3 layers of 6oz cloth orientated 45 degrees from vertical. You
>> must use epoxy because boat resin eats styrofoam. After curing, trim
>> the edges and dig out the foam.........or, just leave it there, except
>> where the hinges and handle goes. Fill and paint........seems like I
>> remember having a red door on my Eberly.
>> Have fun,
>> JJ
>
> Further to JJ technique:
> If I want the "mold" to go away, I do the following:
> After shaping, cover the entire surface with masking tape as smoothly as
> practical. Overlaps don't matter.
> Wax the heck out of the resulting surface.
> Do lay up.
> Peel and scrape the foam out after curing.
> This is an easier clean up than trying to get foam crap off the layup.
> Good Luck UH
>
Another foam that shapes really nicely with a blade and coarse sandpaper
is DuPont FloorMate - its a blue, non-beaded foam that comes in 4' x 8'
sheets in 1 or 1.5 inch (25 or 35mm) sheets. It is easily glued together
with white PVA or (better) pale yellow aliphatic wood glue. Aliphatic is
better if you're going to sand the assembled item because it sands well
without balling up as PVA tends to do.

Epoxy laminating resin is good for glassing the Floormate: I used
Floormate/epoxy resin/glass to make the male forms I used to mould a set
tie-down tip fittings for my Libelle:

http://www.gregorie.org/gliding/tie-down/

If I was making a Eberle door I think I'd leave the foam in place as part
of the door and put a layer or two of 3-4 oz glasscloth over the inside
of the foam to protect it from dings. The extra weight of doing this
would be small but the resulting door would be a lot stiffer and more
resistant to damage.

===========

For what its worth, surfers used to shape the foam cores of their boards
with a wire brush. This shapes the blocks faster than cutting and sanding
does but don't get too heavy-handed and enthusiastic if you try this
method.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org |

SoaringXCellence
August 11th 16, 05:08 AM
Thank you all for your replies. I have done both the foam plug method and the eat-it-away technique for many years, and I agree it works well, but as I said, I'm not just interested in a better door, but an original one if it can be found.

Mike

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