Covering with PolyFiber Fabric -- Modified process.
The main modification is to paint all the surfaces you want the fabric glued to ( twice with thinned Poly-Tak ) Of course, letting it dry in-between coats. Thinning it makes a smoother surface.
For the Elevators, I'm gluing the fabric to everything to try and prevent air bubbles on the rib cap strips of the exposed fabric.
Next step is to determine where the fabric overlap is going to be. Luckily I can do a full wrap around with one piece of fabric so the overlap is on the bottom of the leading edge ( wrapping bottom first around to the top ) I used a ruler to cut a clean edge before application.
Use an Coverite Pocket thermometer to get the Iron at 200 degrees F to smooth the wrinkles out of the fabric ( doesn't have to be perfectly flat, just no major bumps )
Lay the fabric down on the surface and just wipe MEK or Painter's Solvent ( replacement for MEK in California ) across the surface. I used a folded half sheet paper towel dipped in the Painter's Solvent . The Solvent dry's pretty quick.
The end of the elevators is a little thin to glue the fabric to so I elected to form the fabric over the end.
I let the excess fabric hang over the work bench and the use the 200 F iron to form the fabric around the trailing edge.
Then flip it over and continue the fabric forming process so it lays relatively flat. Then continue the process of Solvent application
If you see bubbles, just apply a little Solvent and rub it in with your finger to smooth it out.
On the Leading edge overlap, I applied a little more Poly-Tac on the fabric overlap area.
The main modification is to paint all the surfaces you want the fabric glued to ( twice with thinned Poly-Tak ) Of course, letting it dry in-between coats. Thinning it makes a smoother surface.
For the Elevators, I'm gluing the fabric to everything to try and prevent air bubbles on the rib cap strips of the exposed fabric.
Next step is to determine where the fabric overlap is going to be. Luckily I can do a full wrap around with one piece of fabric so the overlap is on the bottom of the leading edge ( wrapping bottom first around to the top ) I used a ruler to cut a clean edge before application.
Use an Coverite Pocket thermometer to get the Iron at 200 degrees F to smooth the wrinkles out of the fabric ( doesn't have to be perfectly flat, just no major bumps )
Lay the fabric down on the surface and just wipe MEK or Painter's Solvent ( replacement for MEK in California ) across the surface. I used a folded half sheet paper towel dipped in the Painter's Solvent . The Solvent dry's pretty quick.
The end of the elevators is a little thin to glue the fabric to so I elected to form the fabric over the end.
I let the excess fabric hang over the work bench and the use the 200 F iron to form the fabric around the trailing edge.
Then flip it over and continue the fabric forming process so it lays relatively flat. Then continue the process of Solvent application
If you see bubbles, just apply a little Solvent and rub it in with your finger to smooth it out.
On the Leading edge overlap, I applied a little more Poly-Tac on the fabric overlap area.
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