In my limited experience coiling I found an epoxy to be very nice for
varnishing coils. If you buy the two part stuff from Home Depot or Lowes
you'll be more than satisfied. It's labeled as being for bartops,
embedding
photos in surfaces, etc. You'll know it when you see it. Make sure you
use
a rubber spatula to apply the stuff, if you use a foam brush or otherwise
it
will put bubbles into the finish. The finish drys very hard, and is
crystal
clear.
On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 6:09 AM, bunnykiller <bunnikillr@xxxxxxx> wrote:
hey Kris...
Instead of sanding my coil to develope raw spots, mine fell over against
the sharp edge of the tool box leaving a couple of inches exposed. I used
"Glyptol" to patch up the scratch and had no problems with the insulation
issues. I must admit tho, the Glyptol fix job wasnt a "pretty" repair.
The
color differential looks out of place...
Scot D
Kris Grillo wrote:
I hand wound a 6" acrylic form with 22 gauge a few months ago. It wasn't
the greatest winding job I had ever done. There were a few turns that
were a
little loose, but over all, turned out pretty damn good for not building
a
jig. I started coating it with poly and once I got about 10 coats on it
I
noticed it was kind of getting a little rough from dust and whatnot, so
I
grabbed a piece of 400 grit sand paper and gave it a light once over and
began coating it again.
snip
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