Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Cabin Doors, CPES and Some Hatch Work

Work continues on the cabin doors while Winter continues to hammer us with snow and cold temperatures. I'd expected to at least see some days in the 50s at this point in March, but I'm still blasting the propane heater for every teardrop session. I was anxious to see the 50s so that I could apply the CPES (Clear Penetrating Epoxy Sealer) with the garage open for ventilation. As Winter overstays its welcome, I've had to just plow through.



I've finished sanding and cleaning up edges and lines on both cabin doors, and you see one above with a coat of CPES. I had the garage door (the human version) open to at least balance temperature with ventilation. It's nasty stuff, but the Spring temps refuse to show.




With both doors coated with CPES, I used the remainder of the batch and applied it to areas of the hatch door above. I don't want to waste CPES, it's a bit expensive. The outer left and right ribs and adjacent surfaces got the attention, as well as parts of the two ribs inside those. Once that dried, the hatch door went back onto the teardrop with a  few temporary screws so that I could trim the bottom edge.




This was my final major trimming of the hatch door. The bottom edge, on the right side of the photo above, needed some trimming to normalize the gap between the door and floor when closed. The belt sander was a slow, but successful tool here. A couple hours of grinding away with the sander in that position is good for your arms and shoulders, right?





The hatch door made its way once again to the bench for more sanding and finally a motherlode of CPES. (I've been referring to it at EPS in more recent posts, I'll go back and fix that). I really overdid it. It's still in the 40s outside, and I opened the human garage door for ventilation, but the scent was still overpowering. I ended up with a headache after applying the CPES to such a large surface area. I woke up at 3AM with the headache as strong as ever and had to open the bedroom windows to the freezing air to solve this. I told you this stuff is nasty. I won't be doing another large treatment until Spring weather arrives. It's frustrating, since it's taking its time. I've got plenty to do in the meantime!

-g

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