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#1
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I have a question some of you Epoxy builders might know. Is Cotton
Flox okay to use as a structural filler in vinyl ester resin?. And if so, why is it not called for to be used in it? Mostly, micro balloons, cabosil, and milled fibers are used in vinyl ester, but in epoxy they use cotton flox. I can think of a few uses where cotton flox would be nice to use. I'm just can't find any info say whether or not it's compatiable with vinyl ester resin. |
#2
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Ted wrote:
I have a question some of you Epoxy builders might know. Is Cotton Flox okay to use as a structural filler in vinyl ester resin?. And if so, why is it not called for to be used in it? Mostly, micro balloons, cabosil, and milled fibers are used in vinyl ester, but in epoxy they use cotton flox. I can think of a few uses where cotton flox would be nice to use. I'm just can't find any info say whether or not it's compatiable with vinyl ester resin. In epoxy adhesive, cotton flox is used to thicken the uncured adhesive (to keep it from running). Microballoons are used to maintain some separation between the mating surfaces (mostly so the adhesive isn't completely squeezed out but sometimes to prevent contact between dissimilar metals). I suppose either is useful for thinning the adhesive if bond strength isn't critical. I realize this doesn't address your question about vinyl ester, just some of the reasoning behind epoxy. Hope that helps a little... |
#3
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Ted wrote:
I have a question some of you Epoxy builders might know. Is Cotton Flox okay to use as a structural filler in vinyl ester resin?. And if so, why is it not called for to be used in it? Mostly, micro balloons, cabosil, and milled fibers are used in vinyl ester, but in epoxy they use cotton flox. I can think of a few uses where cotton flox would be nice to use. I'm just can't find any info say whether or not it's compatiable with vinyl ester resin. Dunno Ted, use glass microspheres for epoxy. use pheonolic microspheres for 'esters. Unless it's something like that, I can't see any reason not to use cotton. Of course, it will probably prove to be exactly that - so go figure. Richard |
#4
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you could do a small test part. even when the parts of the equation
are "proven" and/or "as directed" a little experiment for Q&A is done now and then...kinda like scratching the resin left over in the cup. |
#5
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On 2 Apr 2006 23:35:02 -0700, "
wrote: my impression was ballons and flox bring only physical contributions to the mix....and therefore substituting balloons with flox would fill AND strengthen a joint, but do no harm. In all my composites training, the only no-no I heard was to use merely balloons when flox was called for, and I'm sure you knew that already. Not really, I have no experience with flox at all. But it's properties seem to be that it's stronger than microballoons. I would suspect it's also heavy, so has a weight penalty compared to micro. I'm going to bond some epoxy made wing fillets to the fuselage of my Glasair 3. And would like to mix in some flox. But in this case, I'll be bonding with AeroPoxy, and use the flox to thicken it. But since I'll have some flox left over, I'm going to see how it mixes with vinyl ester for later use. Ted |
#6
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Ted wrote:
On 2 Apr 2006 23:35:02 -0700, " wrote: my impression was ballons and flox bring only physical contributions to the mix....and therefore substituting balloons with flox would fill AND strengthen a joint, but do no harm. In all my composites training, the only no-no I heard was to use merely balloons when flox was called for, and I'm sure you knew that already. Not really, I have no experience with flox at all. But it's properties seem to be that it's stronger than microballoons. I would suspect it's also heavy, so has a weight penalty compared to micro. I'm going to bond some epoxy made wing fillets to the fuselage of my Glasair 3. And would like to mix in some flox. But in this case, I'll be bonding with AeroPoxy, and use the flox to thicken it. But since I'll have some flox left over, I'm going to see how it mixes with vinyl ester for later use. Ted In my use of composites, balloons were used when a very light filler was needed and flox was used when strength was necessary. The fibers of flox established a much stronger bond but was heavier than balloons. The balloon mixture was much easier to sand also. |
#7
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1 Jim Carriere wrote: Ted wrote: I have a question some of you Epoxy builders might know. Is Cotton Flox okay to use as a structural filler in vinyl ester resin?. And if so, why is it not called for to be used in it? Mostly, micro balloons, cabosil, and milled fibers are used in vinyl ester, but in epoxy they use cotton flox. I can think of a few uses where cotton flox would be nice to use. I'm just can't find any info say whether or not it's compatiable with vinyl ester resin. In epoxy adhesive, cotton flox is used to thicken the uncured adhesive (to keep it from running). Microballoons are used to maintain some separation between the mating surfaces (mostly so the adhesive isn't completely squeezed out but sometimes to prevent contact between dissimilar metals). I suppose either is useful for thinning the adhesive if bond strength isn't critical. I realize this doesn't address your question about vinyl ester, just some of the reasoning behind epoxy. Hope that helps a little... Eeek! Ok, the deal is cotton flox is used not to thicken (the epoxy will still run), but to make a moldable structural construct. The micro can be used for non-structural thickening & the cabosil is used primarily for thickening. The effects on the resin are as follows: Cabosil and flox make for heavier structures, flox is typically used for structural applications (those cute pens you can buy that look like polished turtle shell are made from it), and micro will make a friable structure with little or no strength, but light as a feather. It is true that micro is used to ensure that while bonding two structures some resin is left between the two parts. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFEMVrvpxCQXwV2bJARAkPnAJ9heALoh4QxA/2snurNciCwtvFfwgCgg9FD Po5WgqyLCmrIIK0VE1tVWQw= =4Fto -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
#8
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Hi Ted,
As for any filler, 3 things are critical for its use: - No chemical interaction with the resin: Will insure that either the filler or the resin are affected by the other materials and chemicals in play. - Good wetability: the filler has to mix with the resin. It must be wetted easily by the resin. An appropriate surface treatment can be done if the material itself is not wetable enough. - Good adhesion with the resin: For obvious strength reasons. Goes not together with the wetability, so you can create a weak bond if the resin adhesion with the filler is lost during cure. The best way is to check if cellulose (cotton is about 100% cellulose) is affected by the vinyl-ester chemicals, then test if the mix is good and if the cured resistance is Ok... Then you can probably use it. From a materials science engineer Luc |
#9
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Jeez guys... Just ask anyone who works at a boat factory...Dribble some
catalyzed vinylester resin on your cotton chinos and see if it will come off (not)... Cotton flox will bond forever with your resin... denny |
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