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Author Topic: No stink finish question....  (Read 4375 times)

Online Steve Berry

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No stink finish question....
« on: September 14, 2024, 06:26:33 PM »
I'm to the point I need to figure out a couple of things out on my current build. I'm planning on a polycrylic base coat, applying silkspan to my fully sheeted (foam) wing. My big question is prefinish with polycrylic & silkspan, then install in fuse, or install first, then finish?

I'm prepared either way. I just want to get it right. Color coats will either be Rustoleum, spray can car paint, or perhaps the spray appliance epoxy paint (primarily white), with perhaps 2K clear as final top coat.

Steve

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« Last Edit: September 14, 2024, 09:34:30 PM by Steve Berry »

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #1 on: September 14, 2024, 11:37:55 PM »
I'm to the point I need to figure out a couple of things out on my current build. I'm planning on a polycrylic base coat, applying silkspan to my fully sheeted (foam) wing. My big question is prefinish with polycrylic & silkspan, then install in fuse, or install first, then finish?

I'm prepared either way. I just want to get it right. Color coats will either be Rustoleum, spray can car paint, or perhaps the spray appliance epoxy paint (primarily white), with perhaps 2K clear as final top coat.

Steve

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I feel very strongly both ways.  Either way will work.  I think most finish components then assemble.  I go the opposite route, probably because I compose a plane in leu of building one.  I like to see the fully assembled plane while I can still change something.  Good luck

Ken

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Online Steve Berry

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #2 on: September 15, 2024, 09:00:56 AM »
I guess my question boils down to will the epoxy used to glue in the wing hold if I pre-finish the wing with polycrylic? I know people pre-finish with silkspan & dope all the time and there's not really much of an issue installing the wing in those cases. But...that's dope, not polycrylic.

Steve

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #3 on: September 15, 2024, 11:14:28 AM »
I guess my question boils down to will the epoxy used to glue in the wing hold if I pre-finish the wing with polycrylic? I know people pre-finish with silkspan & dope all the time and there's not really much of an issue installing the wing in those cases. But...that's dope, not polycrylic.

Steve
One of the reasons I install before covering is so that I can reinforce the wing fuselage joint from the inside with glass and epoxy at the seams.  Some folks overlap the center section covering to strengthen the wing joint.  That seemed to come into vogue when people stopped double planking the center sections and a lot of very nice planes were retired with folded wings when they couldn't handle the added weight and lift of the modern stunter.  I have no doubt that a covered wing sealed with polyacrylic will be strong enough if Epoxied and has even small fillets, especially if it is a profile.  On a profile you can drill an 1/8" hole from the bottom through the LE and TE and slide in a dowel if you are worried about the joint failing.  As a side note, I sealed the frame on my Trifecta (the twin tail profile) with polycrylic before gluing the wing to the fuselage.  It is covered with Monokote after a thorough sanding.

Ken

What is the plane you are covering?  Profile or Full Body?
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Online Steve Berry

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #4 on: September 15, 2024, 11:47:55 AM »
What is the plane you are covering?  Profile or Full Body?

Electric Magician with Tom Dixon foam wings, so profile.

This is the covering material I have and am planning to use: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004ZB9HFO

Steve

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #5 on: September 15, 2024, 12:35:47 PM »
Electric Magician with Tom Dixon foam wings, so profile.

This is the covering material I have and am planning to use: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004ZB9HFO

Steve
I have never covered with tissue on a CL again after my grandmother put her hand through my outboard wing right before appearance judging at the 1964 NATS and cost me a place in the Walker flyoff.  Guess it psychological.  Get it on and get out to the circles while it is still Fall.  Best flying weather in the year.

Ken
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Online Steve Berry

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #6 on: September 15, 2024, 12:41:54 PM »
That's my plan. Only kink in it is that the twins are coming (not your plane, my babies). Estimated birthdate is 10/10, with a possibility of sooner due to some outside circumstances. So, time is getting to be in short supply.

Steve

Online Jim Svitko

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #7 on: September 15, 2024, 03:39:49 PM »
I have never used polycrylic, and I rarely, if ever these days, build profiles.  That said, I prefer a wood-to-wood joint, no matter if profile or full fuselage.  Then finish.  It might not matter any, but I would rather not find out the hard way.

I make balsa fillets, sanded with paper wrapped around a piece of brass tubing.  Attach silkspan to bare wood with dope, overlapping the fuselage-wing fillet.  I never had a structural failure with this method.

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #8 on: September 15, 2024, 05:48:28 PM »
I have never used polycrylic, and I rarely, if ever these days, build profiles.  That said, I prefer a wood-to-wood joint, no matter if profile or full fuselage.  Then finish.  It might not matter any, but I would rather not find out the hard way.

I make balsa fillets, sanded with paper wrapped around a piece of brass tubing.  Attach silkspan to bare wood with dope, overlapping the fuselage-wing fillet.  I never had a structural failure with this method.
Balsa fillets!  We may be the only two people in the world still doing that. 

Ken
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Offline Dave_Trible

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #9 on: September 17, 2024, 02:52:47 PM »
Profiles are vibrators and known to stress crack at the wing/fuse joint unless well glued or epoxied.   I'd definitely prefer to do the wood to wood joint here and finish after.   That's the way I do them all anyway.

Dave
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Online Steve Berry

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Re: No stink finish question....
« Reply #10 on: September 17, 2024, 06:47:48 PM »
Profiles are vibrators and known to stress crack at the wing/fuse joint unless well glued or epoxied.   I'd definitely prefer to do the wood to wood joint here and finish after.   That's the way I do them all anyway.

Dave

I think that's what I'm going to do, just to be safe. I don't want anything interfering with that joint more than is necessary. Tack in place with CA, insure square, straight, and level, and then epoxy in place using the heat gun to heat up the epoxy and make it flow into the already tight joint. Once that's done...sand, sand, sand, and then I might be ready to sand some more before starting to apply the finish.

Steve


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