tints are difficult to do and probably should be avoided if you are just starting to laminate...the colour is added to the resin...in this case the top and bottom will be the same colour so I first weigh up what I will need for both sides
then the colour goes in....something going on with the colour here in real life its a tobacco colour must be the neon lights or something cause it looks yellow in these shots...dont panic Tassie its gold....back on the scales and separate into two mixes....I use around 950 to 1000grms per side but thats probably a bit lean for first timers...better to have too much than not enough,
here is where it gets tricky for me to show as I am takiing the photo's myself...I get one chance for the first shot then my hands are tied to the end...I am sure if you google surfboard laminating you will have more vidio on the subject than you can watch...one trick of the trade that I can give away is...dont put hardner in the whole mix.... pour some of your mix into a separate vessel and beef up the catalyst into that smaller mix to finish off....this way you can wet out all your cloth...get everything all even, using a slower mix..then when you are ready to finish off you can use the little bit you have separated with a hotter mix and the whole job will go off just as you finish...which is what you want...too slow a mix and you will have what are called drain outs, this is where the resin has long enough to drain out of the cloth and into the foam...too fast a mix and....well.....chaos...got a bit of flare in this shot but you get the idea
so everything is all even and its starting to gel...the time to flip it over and cut it is important, if you tap it with your fingernails and it feels a bit hard its about ready to cut....too early and all the cloth will fluff up to late and its a mother to cut... stay with it until its time, dont walk away and do something else...you forget it and come back too late and its tragic
nice sharp blade, I use a new one for every cut...work your way around the board a few inches at a time
looking good a nice clean cut
I like to leave them at least overnight before I glass the deck...they have to get hard enuogh to be able to fare the edge of the cut you have just done