Terryscustom
640cc Uber Pimp
So back to the canopy for a little bit. After the glass job dries overnight it can be trimmed around the edges with a razor blade. I'm trying something I've been pondering for filling glass weave......drywall compound. I had great luck with this instead of body filler on my cowl plug and I wanted to see what it did for this purpose. The ready made stuff is perfect, about like toothpaste consistency and is heavy but nearly all water weight. Plus it takes almost nothing to fill the weave. I've done this with body filler before and it's a mess and hard to sand even if you use glazing filler. I've done it by hammering on filler primer and that gets heavy.
So I spread a very thin layer over the glass and put in front of a fan to dry. About 20 minutes later I sanded it. I repeated that step again in case any pinholes were missed. Sanded and shot one quick spot of rattle can primer. I figured that would be a great test because rattle can primer shrinks terribly.
After about 40 minutes I scuffed the primer and I can't really show in a picture but you can't see the weave. With 2-3 coats of rattle can filler primer and some sanding it would be perfect. I will be using 2K primer because it does not shrink and fills better. I'll post the materials I use as normal.
So I spread a very thin layer over the glass and put in front of a fan to dry. About 20 minutes later I sanded it. I repeated that step again in case any pinholes were missed. Sanded and shot one quick spot of rattle can primer. I figured that would be a great test because rattle can primer shrinks terribly.
After about 40 minutes I scuffed the primer and I can't really show in a picture but you can't see the weave. With 2-3 coats of rattle can filler primer and some sanding it would be perfect. I will be using 2K primer because it does not shrink and fills better. I'll post the materials I use as normal.