AlabamaNewbie
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2018
- Messages
- 239
I am planning ahead for the day I actually get far enough to think about foam. Haha
So at one of my jobs, we use the same 2 part foam for creating packing for irregular shaped parts ( take a box and line it with thin plastic sheeting, inject the foam, fold the plastic over and wait for it to start rising, place the part in, cover with plastic, inject foam in the tol and seal the box). Its a pretty snazzy system. There are 2 55 gallon drums and hoses and a nozzle and the pump pulls it all up and mixes then comes out of the nozzle. This is going to save me a ton of time - hopefully. I could have my i jection holes in the deck, take the boat to work and inject the voids. The problem is that with this system, you really need to be able to see because since you aren’t mixing it, you don’t really know how much your putting in. The other idea is to take the boat before the deck is on and fill the voids. This might mean that foam goes higher than the stringers. I don’t know how trimming the top off the foam might affect its buoyancy or water repellancy.
The third option would be to have my deck pieces cut out but not glassed or atta hed. I could fill the voids, cover with our thin plastic sheet, and set the plywood down, and the weight of the plywood should prevent the foam from rising to high. Then back home i could take the deck back up and do the other stuff.
Thoughts?
So at one of my jobs, we use the same 2 part foam for creating packing for irregular shaped parts ( take a box and line it with thin plastic sheeting, inject the foam, fold the plastic over and wait for it to start rising, place the part in, cover with plastic, inject foam in the tol and seal the box). Its a pretty snazzy system. There are 2 55 gallon drums and hoses and a nozzle and the pump pulls it all up and mixes then comes out of the nozzle. This is going to save me a ton of time - hopefully. I could have my i jection holes in the deck, take the boat to work and inject the voids. The problem is that with this system, you really need to be able to see because since you aren’t mixing it, you don’t really know how much your putting in. The other idea is to take the boat before the deck is on and fill the voids. This might mean that foam goes higher than the stringers. I don’t know how trimming the top off the foam might affect its buoyancy or water repellancy.
The third option would be to have my deck pieces cut out but not glassed or atta hed. I could fill the voids, cover with our thin plastic sheet, and set the plywood down, and the weight of the plywood should prevent the foam from rising to high. Then back home i could take the deck back up and do the other stuff.
Thoughts?