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· Junior Member
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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
Long day of glassing in new knees for my chain plates in paradise. Pleasant evening in the cockpit, but the smell of curing epoxy below has driven me to sleep with the mosquitos. Hopefully a little quinine will prevent any ill effects from those nasty critters.
 
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Discussion Starter · #3 ·
Moving to the foredeck...under the stars, fairly big ol moon lighting up the sky, gentle breeze cooling things down, my pillow awaits...oblivion is mine.
 

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Epoxy... Fumes?
Odor, more like it... Certainly I find polyester 'fumes' far more obnoxious than epoxy resin smells, but still probably not want to sleep next to a freshly curing job...
 

· One of None
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hmmmm we did lots and lots of poxy when buiding strip canoes .. the smell was never that bad imho, even pleasant to me ... but that's me .. I spray linseed oil behind my ears when I go to the opera....
 

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humor Jerry.. humor! I love everything about boats. especially wooden boats, varnish, all the oils etc.
 

· One of None
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Curing epoxy fumes are dangerous, as is epoxy sanding dust - wear a good respirator with a carbon filter.
Health Effects from Overexposure to Epoxy
Respiratory Irritation
Breathing highly concentrated epoxy vapor can irritate the respiratory system and cause sensitization. At room temperature, epoxy vapors are unlikely to be highly concentrated. However, if you are already sensitized to epoxy, exposure to low concentrations of epoxy vapors can trigger an allergic reaction. At warmer temperatures and in unventilated spaces, the epoxy vapor levels increase.

Never breathe the sanding dust of partially cured epoxy. Epoxy chemicals remain reactive until they have cured. Serious health problems can result from sanding epoxy before it is fully cured. When you inhale these dust particles, they become trapped in the mucus lining of your respiratory system. The reactive material can cause severe respiratory irritation and/or respiratory allergies.

WEST SYSTEM fillers present few hazards by themselves. However, breathing any nuisance dust will worsen existing respiratory problems. Smokers and others whose lungs are under strain are far more likely to develop serious respiratory problems.
 

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Some people become very sensitive to epoxy fumes An old friend, Capt Sven Johanson , would lose much of his face and neck skin when messing with the mix. Come to think of it, linseed oil behind the ears(if boiled) was always a real turn on. opera, not so much.
 

· Tartan 27' owner
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Long day of glassing in new knees for my chain plates in paradise. Pleasant evening in the cockpit, but the smell of curing epoxy below has driven me to sleep with the mosquitos. Hopefully a little quinine will prevent any ill effects from those nasty critters.
I'm not looking forward to this job myself Aevetyr60. Especially deconstructing the existing 47 year old knee walls and cabinetry.
Luckily (or not) for me, I need to wait until the weather warms up enough for a reasonably quick cure time - unlike where you are: somewhere in Thailand near Myanmar. At least that is where I think you said you were, last we met in the chat-o-sphere. Speaking o' which, drop back in sometime... ;-!)
 

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Discussion Starter · #16 ·
I awoke in the early hours to the Southern Cross...cool breeze making me shiver, how the blood thins in the tropics, it must have all of 72 F. Fumes and vapor passed so I threw out all the salon cushions from the v berth and got some extra z's wrapped in the thinnest of sheets dreaming of my telak in Thailand.
 
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Discussion Starter · #17 ·
Tonight it's GRP dust and the waft of diesel fumes as I pulled a tank for cleaning. Thinkk i'll stick to the foredeck, cooler, not dusty and the hint of the Southern Cross in the early hours.
 

· Freedom isn't free
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Wow, and I'm stuck in a pole barn lucky to get 65 degrees with the heater wide open when our warmest day so far has been 55 outside.

From 12/6/2014


Till this morning 03/12/2015


Getting there, slowly. Wouldn't wanna be ANYWHERE near the boat while this crap is curing. Mask, goggles, gloves... the whole kit.
 

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Discussion Starter · #19 ·
Such is the life of a cruising sailor. Hey, a pole barn sounds good to me! I'll just suffer through a night under the stars, a little dusty, happy with a hard days work well done. Small pleasures really of fixing up GOB's in distant anchorages.
 

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Discussion Starter · #20 ·
An epoxy free day at last! A little paint, sixa flex and a few other other assorted noxious substances and I'm calling it a day. Boy a beer tastes good!
 
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