Scotch Magic tape is what I use on woodworking projects, you have to
time it just right so the glue is set, but not too set to get it out
of the corners. For your application, you could probably let it set
up hard before pulling the tape. You might want to check first to see
that the backing doesn't dissolve in the epoxy.
Stan
--
Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED)
ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk
[at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & >32K emails --> NUL:
>PVA (PolyVinyl Alcohol - NOT white glue!)
Had a row with my woodwork teacher at the age of 12. He was bigger than me and
won. But I was right!
:-)
Mark Rand
RTFM
The term you want is "release agent". Petrolatum (Vaseline) works.
Kiwi neutral shoe polish is the preferred release agent of at least
one guy who beds rifle actions in epoxy for high accuracy.
> Otherwise the 'gold standard' mould release
> for fibreglass work is PVA (PolyVinyl Alcohol - NOT white glue!) and if
> you know anyone in the trade you may be able to beg a little bottle
> full.
Polyvinyl alcohol used to be sold as a hard contact lens wetting solution.
No, not really. PVA was one ingredient, but by no means the entire solution.
> No, not really. PVA was one ingredient, but by no means the entire
> solution.
Your usual useless comment.
You are entirely correct, the product is mostly water, not pure PVA, with a
bit of preservative. Which has nothing to do with the application.
Now tells how atoms are mostly empty space.