0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
No cupping is because of the way you apply the clamping force. If you are using thin lams you need to use a pressure strip.
Quote from: RyanY on July 06, 2021, 04:32:55 pmThe amount of pressure really depends on the glue so you should look at the manufacturers recommendation. Clamps will help close gaps but if the mating surfaces are a good fit you don’t necessarily need a ton of pressure for PVA glues like Titebond. Not sure about epoxies, especially since some have good gap filling properties. I use plastic packing wrap for my bows and have gotten great results. I’d like to get my hands in some inner tubes.Pat might be right about inner tubes never being able to clamp too tight - but I do know with epoxies in general laminations (eg wooden boat building) that you can make a joint too tight and squeeze out all the glue and have a resin starved joint. There are products such as glass spheres, or very thin copper wire filaments, or some people use monofilament line, to act as “bond-line spacers” to make sure that however much clamping pressure you exert there is space for the epoxy...[/quoteUnless you are getting some super duper extra thick/wide tubes it isn't a problem. Normal tubes upto 2" you should pull till they bottom out. I've done a few hundred glue-ups using inner tubes with EA40 or Titebond 3. Even with my 2 piece forms I use 70 psi in the tubes. To get dry joints you pretty much need to use clamps and really cinch down on them.
The amount of pressure really depends on the glue so you should look at the manufacturers recommendation. Clamps will help close gaps but if the mating surfaces are a good fit you don’t necessarily need a ton of pressure for PVA glues like Titebond. Not sure about epoxies, especially since some have good gap filling properties. I use plastic packing wrap for my bows and have gotten great results. I’d like to get my hands in some inner tubes.
O, I'm not planning to inflate the tube, it is a cast off flat. Wrapping it really tight is what other people meant, right?
I was going to wrap a whole tube around each limb, you mean I can cut the thing in half length wise and wrap a whole bow with one tube?
There are products such as glass spheres, or very thin copper wire filaments, or some people use monofilament line, to act as “bond-line spacers” to make sure that however much clamping pressure you exert there is space for the epoxy...