The 'core skins' are probably a layer of fiberglass mat. They wet out the end grain balsa with polyester resin, lay a layer of matt on top of it and wet out the whole thingrnummi wrote:And yet another question, once the core is suctioned out, do you take out the original core skins (leaving the inner and outer fiberglass skins hanging in the breeze) then resin up the coosa board and slide it in? I can see the latter, you just replicate the size of the old core.
If you are leaving the original core skins in there however wouldn't that make it too thick?
When you try to take out the balsa, you're going to be left with that layer of mat and it's going to be very rough because the resin will have penetrated unevenly into the balsa. I can't think of an easy way to get inside that 1/2 inch void left when you vacuum out the balsa - How would you smooth out those rough sides so you could slide *anything* between them? How would you even get in there with something to wet out the inside with epoxy so you could force the coosa into the void? Honestly, I don't see you ever getting an evenly bonded surface between the inner and outer 'skins' by trying to force a wetted out piece of coosa in there
If you were doing a lay-up from scratch with a piece of coosa in the middle, I could see where you could get a good bond to both sides of the board, but even then, is coosa as structurally strong as end grain balsa? I don't know
Just my opinion, but I think you'd be better off all around by leaving the balsa, drilling the holes and pouring in epoxy. If you find you need to do the overhead of the windows, of course you'll have to remove and replace the balsa with something as you couldn't do a pour above the windows. The overhead space is smaller - Why not try the coosa above the windows if you must replace a rotted core up there and see how it works before you remove all the balsa coring and find it's nearly impossible to replace it?
Don