Co2
I wished I still had one of my wire feed welding machines ( MIG Welders )
because it uses Co2 gas.
Then I could do some of my own tests and could provide a honest factual answer.
Honestly I do not know for a fact that CO2 will pop bubbles in epoxy, I have read it will in several you tube links and in other wood related forums.
I have never mixed up any 105/207 west systems epoxy before.
And I screwed up and bought the 206 hardener when I really wanted the 207 hardener instead.
I have ordered some 207 but it hasn't came in yet.
It seems that almost all the finishes on pool cues could be technical if you have never used it before or in this case I am going to have to stumble through learning how to perfect a good long lasting hard glass like finish on a pool cue.
So I started this thread to get all the hints on how to use a epoxy on pool cues.
.
I thought Epoxy might be a finish that would work for me if I could lean how to apply it properly on a pool cue.......
FWIW, I have never heard of using CO2 to de-gas epoxy. Nor has my material science colleague or my chemical engineering colleague on my team (and we are constantly developing any number of adhesive processes as our daily grind). Maybe we'll learn something today.
The standard ways to de-gas epoxy have all been mentioned in this thread:
1) Be mindful of viscosity and open time
2) Create a pressure differential (via any number of different methods), if possible
I can imagine why someone might think CO2 somehow helps, but not really directly. For example, maybe someone created a pressure differential by jetting a bottle of CO2 across the surface and attributed the success to the CO2. I'm not connecting any dots on why the CO2 would be working on incorporated air bubbles, which is normally introduced into the epoxy by mixing, since gas isn't created by the chemical reaction of epoxy resin.
Mixing in a vacuum bell jar is done in the adhesive industry. I'm not sure how feasible that could be for cue finishing.
Freddie <~~~ stuck on glue
I wished I still had one of my wire feed welding machines ( MIG Welders )
because it uses Co2 gas.
Then I could do some of my own tests and could provide a honest factual answer.
Honestly I do not know for a fact that CO2 will pop bubbles in epoxy, I have read it will in several you tube links and in other wood related forums.
I have never mixed up any 105/207 west systems epoxy before.
And I screwed up and bought the 206 hardener when I really wanted the 207 hardener instead.
I have ordered some 207 but it hasn't came in yet.
It seems that almost all the finishes on pool cues could be technical if you have never used it before or in this case I am going to have to stumble through learning how to perfect a good long lasting hard glass like finish on a pool cue.
So I started this thread to get all the hints on how to use a epoxy on pool cues.
.
I thought Epoxy might be a finish that would work for me if I could lean how to apply it properly on a pool cue.......