Got a few things in the bags this AM and took quite a few pics so I'll go over a few things that I do.
First I learned that if you don't seal the balsa, the resin will soak in and add needless weight. The resin is already getting a nice smooth even coat of resin so bond there is not an issue. What you want is an even coat and just enough resin on the surface so the vacuum pulls it down 3-4 beads deep on the sheeted parts. On this build I am not doing any coring before or after sheeting as a test for final weight with this foam. If you are coring before sheeting it's your call on sealing the balsa or not. Coring after sheeting may requite some other things like carbon tow or laminates, but resin quantity would be the same as I'm doing here.
So, once the balsa has been taped and cut to just a little oversize and test fit, I hose it down with a liberal coat of cheap n nasty hairspray. Get the cheapest and nastiest can of spray you can from Walmart, works fine. The balsa will bow up since you are introducing a liquid to one face, but it will lay back down after it dries.
As Rick mentioned you will want some sort of manifold system if you are going to bag multiple items. I typically do four at a time so here is my system:
1 - Main Line (first bag hooked up / no pinch valve needed)
2 - Additional feed lines with pinch valves
3 - Joiner line (only needed since I'm using dual pumps)
- You could also use joiner lines to isolate certain parts of the system. For instance if you are using poly glue and doing a whole plane at one time you could open parts that are set and un-bag them while the other parts remain vacuumed.