Home built darkroom sink finish recommendation

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Wilbur Wong

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I think that would be unnecessary. A darkroom shouldn't have a moist atmosphere like a bilge in a boat has. And epoxy will give enough protection from water and chemicals. Just skip fir if you want the surface to be fair later as the annual rings will always show through any kind of paint over fir plywood. Here in Sweden I would choose birch plywood and just check the ends for voids.

/matti

Birch plywood is an excellent choice for dimensional stability.
 

richard ide

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Polyester resin is far inferior to epoxy when cladding a wood surface. The bond is weak whereas with epoxy, the resin permeates the surface. This is from a book on boat construction which is buried somewhere nearby.
 

RobertP

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What about 3/8" plexiglass. I've been building trays out of 1/4" and they seem damn near bullet proof. I had all the parts precut and they must have been CNC cuts because they are within a thousandth or so. Just an idea. Robert
 

Deane Johnson

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One word of caution on the marine resin. I did a sink in that a number of years ago. When it became stained, I sanded it and applied a new coat. Where there was still a little stain from the chemicals that didn't get sanded off, the new coat would not stick.
 

TracyStorer

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One word of caution on the marine resin. I did a sink in that a number of years ago. When it became stained, I sanded it and applied a new coat. Where there was still a little stain from the chemicals that didn't get sanded off, the new coat would not stick.

Polyester or Epoxy Resin?
 

Steve Smith

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I suspect it was epoxy resin. It was sold as a fiberglass boat repair kit, complete with the fiberglass mesh.

If it was for fiberglass, it would more likely be polyester resin. Especially if it was part of a kit.


Steve.
 

matti

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It was a number of years ago and I don't remember, but I remember mixing two ingredients, so I suspect it was epoxy resin. It was sold as a fiberglass boat repair kit, complete with the fiberglass mesh.

then it was polyester. To be able to use polyester on old polyester you need to sand it down so you can smell uncured resin in the laminate to get a chemical bond to. Polyester would be ok to use on plywood when building a dark room sinkh. It is a bit more dangerous to use than epoxy, so it would be best to be outside.

Epoxy will work on sanded polyester but not the other way around.

/matti
 
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