aaron fischer
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 23 de julio de 2024
I used this on the bottom of my pontoons as they were in Salt water and are now corroded and unable to weld. I spread this on and it worked perfectly. Mixes up excellent. Only mix what you can work in 5 min or it will be to hard to spread. It is a true 5 min work time.
GaryK
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 9 de diciembre de 2024
I got this for a boat repair. This is not really a marine epoxy, even though they say it is. This is basically a two-part, 5 minute epoxy that would come in a syringe, that you would buy at Walmart. I went ahead and used it on my boat. It's very thick and it sets very fast. I hope it will durable, but I have my doubts. Definitely would not recommend this for laminating.
DARLINDA G.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 30 de diciembre de 2024
Had my metal roof replaced at great expense. Sadly, my chimney mortar was crumbling and new roof was leaking in heavy rain. Decided to cover the brick and mortar with this epoxy until we save money to rebuild chimney. Dripped some epoxy here and there, but easily removed with heat gun and plastic scraper. Worked great. No leaks so far.
dogzrule
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 18 de junio de 2023
A woodworker said to use marine epoxy but this is way too thick for that. It's a royal pain to deal with and doesn't dry clear. Avoid it for slab projects.I should have used "casting resin" that is pourable.This was almost a complete waste of time and money for the intended use case. On the other hand it bonded really well and the polyurethane had no issues coating it but never use it for woodworking in my opinion. The project came out okay but I would never use this again for that purpose, it's almost useless on smaller cracks. I gave the unused portion away. It's not that much different from JB Weld or something like that. Also it's very hard to get out of the bottle in any quantity. Use a small drill bit to open the spout a little bit before trying to get much out.
Michael Barnett
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 16 de octubre de 2023
This epoxy is easy to mix and apply, but keep two things in mind - it's a bit thick, so wetting out glass cloth (don't use strand mat unless it's specifically epoxy rated) can be a bit tricky, and they aren't kidding when they say the working time is 5 minutes. This stuff is great for patches and crack filling (I used it to repair a bathtub that had been damaged in shipping) but I wouldn't recommend it for laying up any items of large size due to it's fast cure time. My rough guess would be no more than a 1' square patch with 3 layers of glass - and have plenty of spreaders handy. My preferred way to laminate a patch using quick cure resin is to precut the glass, set the pieces on some visqueen, pour the resin on the cloth, spread it, lay another layer of visqueen over the wet glass, and then spread with more pressure. As soon as it's wetted out, peel the patch with the top layer of visqueen off your work area, and slap it onto the area needing repair. Note: you may want to slightly prewet the patch area with resin, especially if it's textured or rough Work out all the air bubbles (quickly, you're on the resin kickoff clock!), let it cure, and then peel off the visqueen. Keep in mind that the strongest laminate will have only enough resin in it to wet out the fiberglass completely, but in a repair situation, this epoxy seems to do a good job of filling the voids, and appears to be strong even without glass fibers infused into it.