Remodelling a fibreglass body

Remodelling a fibreglass body

Author
Discussion

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Friday 24th September 2004
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I need to remodel an existing fibre glass wing, raising a body line by about 20mm and smoothing out some sharp corners in the process. I could just start dolloping on loads of filler and carving out the shape but I am sure there must be a better way - it would weigh a ton!

Can I pad out the wing with a plywood former (attached with rivets) to increase stiffness, then apply filler over the top?

gary_tholl

1,013 posts

277 months

Friday 22nd October 2004
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The great thing about fibreglass - if you get it wrong the first time, you can just cut it out and start again.

I wouldn't bother with filler, fix it right. Sand right down to the gelcoat, then just start fibreglassing. Use wax paper to stop the 'glass from sticking to anything you don't want it on. Then break out the sander.

It's not tough, but it is a messy, time-consuming job.

Gary

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Saturday 6th November 2004
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My main worry is that the 'prosthetic' (sp) part will be very heavy - not to mention expensive on filler. At the thickest point it will be about 100mm and roughly a metre long!!

I was thinking to pad it out first with wood or another material (screwed to the existing bodywork) to get the rough shape and finish it off with a layer of matting, and finally filler.

Fatboy

8,081 posts

279 months

Saturday 6th November 2004
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RazMan said:
My main worry is that the 'prosthetic' (sp) part will be very heavy - not to mention expensive on filler. At the thickest point it will be about 100mm and roughly a metre long!!

I was thinking to pad it out first with wood or another material (screwed to the existing bodywork) to get the rough shape and finish it off with a layer of matting, and finally filler.

No need to make it solid - just knock up a mould for the basic shape, make a fibrglass piece on the mold, then bong it to the appropriate section with more fibreglass...

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Saturday 6th November 2004
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Leaving a hollow void? Won't this create problems?
Also, what is the easiest way to make a mould? I would need to make two 'handed' ones for left and right wings.

Fatboy

8,081 posts

279 months

Saturday 6th November 2004
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RazMan said:
Leaving a hollow void? Won't this create problems?
Also, what is the easiest way to make a mould? I would need to make two 'handed' ones for left and right wings.

Hollow is not a problem - remember we're advocating using proper firbreglass (matting and resin) not the glass fibre reinforced filler.

I would knock up a basic mold out of scrap wood, cover it in wood filler, then sand to the right shape, cover it in clingfilm, apply the release agent and lay the fibreglass on top of it - remember if you're making a male mold that it needs to be slightly smaller (though the same shape) than the desired final piece - femal molds are harder to make, but give you exactly the shape you're looking for. You could make on by7 making the desired shape out of wood+filler as above, then using that to make a cast female mold out of plaster....

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Sunday 7th November 2004
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Thanks Fatboy, when the time comes I will give it a try

Fatboy

8,081 posts

279 months

Sunday 7th November 2004
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Quick tip - stick to the chopped strand mat (CSM), not the woven stuff, CSM is much easier to lay (absolute piece of piss).

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Monday 8th November 2004
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The big boys use clay don't they? How about carving the shape 'in situ' using clay applied directly to the bodywork, then covering with cling film, release agent - then CSM to create a female mould. Then more release agent and apply CSM to make the prosthetic .... then attach and fill.

Does that sound like a plan?

Fatboy

8,081 posts

279 months

Monday 8th November 2004
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RazMan said:
The big boys use clay don't they? How about carving the shape 'in situ' using clay applied directly to the bodywork, then covering with cling film, release agent - then CSM to create a female mould. Then more release agent and apply CSM to make the prosthetic .... then attach and fill.

Does that sound like a plan?

Sounds like a bloody good plan IMHO. Better than my arseing around with wood and filler then plaster idea.
No idea where you get clay from though, can't be hard to locate.

RazMan

Original Poster:

394 posts

243 months

Monday 8th November 2004
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Fatboy said:


No idea where you get clay from though, can't be hard to locate.


My missus is a potter and won't miss a 25kg bag or two! I'll just go into stealth mode and see what I can find