I see that Silmar 41 is popular for casting. I saw a You Tube where a guy uses a Resin from Michaels. Does anyone have experience with it?
Castin' Craft® Clear Polyester Casting Resin
Castin' Craft® Clear Polyester Casting Resin
Castin' Craft is made by ETI, and Silmar is made by Interplastic Corp.
Manufacturer's use different formulations and they cure differently.
It's a misconception that too much catalyst (in this case MEKP) causes the cured product to end up brittle or chip easily. It isn't the amount of catalyst, it is the exotherm that causes this issue. Polyester resin is pre-promoted and the catalyst accelerates the exotherm initiating the crosslinking. Too much heat can cause fracturing in the crosslinking.
In lower temperatures, more catalyst may be required to initiate the exotherm, and the opposite is true with higher temperatures. Also, depending on the amount of resin being used, the amount of catalyst needs to be adjusted. With 2ozs, it would require more catalyst than when using 15ozs.
Yes When you say cure I say set. Not totally dryCan you pour multiple layers with casting craft? 1 color layer let cure, pour clear layer let cure, pour final color layer? Or how about 3 layers of clear?
I've just gotten into casting myself using the Castin Craft Polyester Resin from Michael's. If you havent already discovered, use it in a well ventilated area. This stuff stinks. From what I was told Alumalite is odorless. The other thing with the PR is the work time is tricky to figure out. To quote another member, PR goes from water to snot to solid very quickly. I found this out the hard way. I left my shop for 5 minutes and it started to thicken, then set. What was supposed to be a two color swirl ended up being 2 single color bottle stopper blanks. Lastly, its recommended to use a pressure pot when casting with Alumalite. Not the case when using PR. Good luck!
I've just gotten into casting myself using the Castin Craft Polyester Resin from Michael's. If you havent already discovered, use it in a well ventilated area. This stuff stinks. From what I was told Alumalite is odorless. The other thing with the PR is the work time is tricky to figure out. To quote another member, PR goes from water to snot to solid very quickly. I found this out the hard way. I left my shop for 5 minutes and it started to thicken, then set. What was supposed to be a two color swirl ended up being 2 single color bottle stopper blanks. Lastly, its recommended to use a pressure pot when casting with Alumalite. Not the case when using PR. Good luck!
I know it is an old post but saying that Alumilite is odorless is sort of a misnomer. Alumilite does off gas as it is mixed and curing, the odors are not as strong as PR but I would not want to directly breathe either one. Always use both in well ventilated areas and use a respirator rated for chemical vapors or at a minimum an N95 mask rated for chemical use.