granpa wrote:On april 4th I reported on a covering job gone bad, well shame on me. Each day I checked on my covering job but today I got a surprise....All better, back to the original covering before the application of the 50/50 dope. Please do not ask me how......Dennis
Good to hear it shrunk tight. Reminds me of my painted Coverite Microlite iron-on jobs. When you first paint them, they wrinkle like a prune. After drying a full day, nearly all or sometimes even all of the wrinkles disappear, but it takes a full 24 hours. Very light heat gunning with a high power hair dryer takes care of the rest, but I've learned to wait a day before doing that. I used to get impatient and try to shrink them out right away, but now I've learned to let them dry and shrink out as much as possible, before applying heat.
David Duckett wrote:Humidity!
Using dope below 70* farenheit and dope too thin will slow drying time, also.
I learned that lesson with epoxy. For whatever reason, just a few mere degrees can be so critical. I've found that if the initial curing starts at too cool of a temperature, that it never sets properly, even if moved to a warmer location. It likes to start curing at it's ideal temperature, right from the "get go". I imagine dope and other compounds can be like that also.