bob_mp
Well-known member
Hi,
I'll be putting down the epoxy color coat in my garage late this afternoon. Last time, I ended up with lots of bubbles, perhaps due to air getting entrained in the epoxy during mixing. I probably should have waited until later in the afternoon as well. I have no reason to think that the product itself had anything to do with the problem.
A friend, former Professor of Chemistry, suggested degassing it the epoxy. After watching some YouTube videos, here's the plan:
I've got a 2 stage, 7 CFM vacuum pump, a 40 quart vacuum chamber, and a bunch of paint buckets. I'm planning on mixing the epoxy thoroughly, air be damned, in small batches (1-2 gallons) and then degassing it for 4-5 minutes after it burps. This will bring it to a good rolling boil under vacuum.
Anyone have any experience doing this? Any suggestions?
Any worry about changing the chemistry by letting it boil under a vacuum (boiling out the solvents, for example)?
I'll let you guys know how it turns out.
Thanks!
Bob
I'll be putting down the epoxy color coat in my garage late this afternoon. Last time, I ended up with lots of bubbles, perhaps due to air getting entrained in the epoxy during mixing. I probably should have waited until later in the afternoon as well. I have no reason to think that the product itself had anything to do with the problem.
A friend, former Professor of Chemistry, suggested degassing it the epoxy. After watching some YouTube videos, here's the plan:
I've got a 2 stage, 7 CFM vacuum pump, a 40 quart vacuum chamber, and a bunch of paint buckets. I'm planning on mixing the epoxy thoroughly, air be damned, in small batches (1-2 gallons) and then degassing it for 4-5 minutes after it burps. This will bring it to a good rolling boil under vacuum.
Anyone have any experience doing this? Any suggestions?
Any worry about changing the chemistry by letting it boil under a vacuum (boiling out the solvents, for example)?
I'll let you guys know how it turns out.
Thanks!
Bob
