Went out this morning and began prep for the glue up of the two scales. The first step was to mark and cut the Carbon Fiber liners. Not a big task, lay the two scales on the sheet, mark the needed width, and then cut the panel on the bandsaw. The sheet sparks when you cut it.

Yup, she's tough.
Next, gathered up all the stuff you need so it's all handy. When you mix the two part epoxy, you have about five to ten minutes to get the scales in position and clamped before it begins to set. Then the adhesion will be weakened if you are still moving the panels around still trying to get adjusted. The other option is to mix one panel, then the other. When I first started, and was always fumbling around, THAT was the method I used. One panel at a time. Gotten smoother now. BUT, I make sure everything is at hand. Wax Paper, clamps, mixing / spreading stick, table is prepped. Coffee on hand for the technician...
I tape a few strips of tape onto the table and mix on that. Then when I'm finished, you peel the tape and throw the unused glue in the trash, rolled up inside the gloves. No mess.
11 prepping for glue up.jpg
Next, prior to the glue up, you rough the underside of the scales, and the tops of the liner panels. This insures good adhesion. I use 150 grit sandpaper and just make sure the entire surface takes a good hit. The liner is cut oversized to make the alignment less critical. We'll dress that up prior to assembly and finalize it in shaping and poishing.
12 rough up.jpg
Now, now comes the fun part. On your mark, set, mix. You mix up the two part epoxy. You can use quick set (which I do) or the other various mixes. If you use the slow set, the panels will shift and move a lot easier while you assemble. I mix up the epoxy and spread a thin (ish) coat on the scale, then fit IT to the panel. I try to hit my target, the center of the panel so there is less mess. The less the scale moves, the less chance of squeeze out flowing over the sides and making a huge mess. The Center clamp holds the scale in place allowing the end clamps to apply MORE pressure, then tighten the center clamp. then final pressure on the end clamps.
13 glue and clamps.jpg
I allow at least double the time recommended on the manufacturer's label. Likely overnight. Once epoxy is involved, heat becomes an issue. If anything in the build generates heat, the epoxy can let go. WE avoid over generation of heat from this point on. Drilling, sanding, polishing, we always do these steps in short bursts and cool in water.
MUCH more to come....
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