mathewfarrell
18th December 2008, 05:01 PM
Most of my work is timber surfboards—usually western red cedar or paulownia, and occasionally other random timbers
I finish these with epoxy and usually bamboo fabric, occasionally fibreglass for special cases.
I'm used to sanding the timber to at least 220 before hitting it with epoxy. Anything coarser and the swirl marks from the RO sander can be visible under the glass.
My question is two-fold—do you think I need to sand these timbers to get epoxy to bond, or would a planed surface bond just as well? they're both pretty porous timbers, but I wonder if they become too slick when planed?
Also, for raw timber, a planed finish will show up depth of grain and knots like nothing else. Would a planed finish under epoxy (or any other finish, I guess) look superior, or do you loose this advantage when you saturate it (ie, would a sanded finish look just as good once the resin's on)?
I finish these with epoxy and usually bamboo fabric, occasionally fibreglass for special cases.
I'm used to sanding the timber to at least 220 before hitting it with epoxy. Anything coarser and the swirl marks from the RO sander can be visible under the glass.
My question is two-fold—do you think I need to sand these timbers to get epoxy to bond, or would a planed surface bond just as well? they're both pretty porous timbers, but I wonder if they become too slick when planed?
Also, for raw timber, a planed finish will show up depth of grain and knots like nothing else. Would a planed finish under epoxy (or any other finish, I guess) look superior, or do you loose this advantage when you saturate it (ie, would a sanded finish look just as good once the resin's on)?