Doing Carbon Fiber Overlays Myself - $300 Worth of Parts for $30!

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Publicado 2020-06-06

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  • It’s great that you did this. Many of us watching have projects that we want to do ourselves and we’ll make mistakes too. I am glad that you stuck with it and figured it out.
  • @IdEk5627
    Epoxy resin creates heat once it is mixed with a hardener. Also u need to know ur working time or set time and ur cure time. Also making very large batches creates so much heat that the epoxy will cure faster in the cup so only mix how much u need per part or less.
  • @Mystachao2
    Exactly the type of tutorial I’m looking for. Looks great!
  • @TheFlexxGarage
    Awesome job my man! I had to repair a cracked carbon wing for my R8 and same thing, I let the resin mixture sit and it hardened up. Lol. Lesson learned but once you get the hang of it, it’s actually pretty easy to do. The repair came out awesome and it’s the same steps as your overlays. Again. Awesome job!
  • @Kultbeno
    This man is a genius holy shit looks like ima have to do this with my frs interior pieces tired of using plasti dip n clear coat shit don’t last
  • @johnnycashh7148
    Really cool man, came out great for cheap. Might have to try this on a splitter.
  • @Garage-97
    It actually looks really nice. Good work
  • @DingoZed
    For plastics, I had great luck with 3M 77 Spray Adhesive. *Also to mention, I believe you accelerated the curing exothermal reaction process too fast while trying to remove bubbles. The intense heat is probably what warped the cup.
  • I don’t know why more people don’t do this that want the look but don’t care about spending $300 per piece. Plus it does strengthen so to those who say it’s a waste it is not. Turned out great.
  • @nkonie7177
    Utube did it’s thing again & I learned great stuff today. Great video bro!
  • @wolffmanjack4743
    Thank you. 👍🏻 I was looking at wrapping my interior and fender flares, but I would much rather do this.
  • @joelthomas79
    Don’t worry about bubbles in the cup. Also, don’t use foam brushes they cause bubbles. Great job btw. Some people use chip brushes but those can leave bristles. I hot glue the chip brushes near the handle to prevent that.
  • @WinterWraith1
    At 13:41 to prevent that in the future, cut the excess off after you apply the epoxy. The weight of the epoxy will make the edges bend
  • Someone else mentioned it and they're exactly right. The reason the cup shrank was because the epoxy "cooked off" As I'm sure you know, Epoxy resin is exothermic (creates heat as it cures) you created a prime situation for this by heating the resin to get the bubbles out AND by having so much in the cup for an extended period. Seems like you figured out a solution on your own by mixing individual batches. Also, a safer (and more effective) way to remove the bubbles is to put them into a vacuum chamber- doesn't need to be anything fancy.. something like a large pickle jar works perfectly fine for a makeshift chamber.