Padre
Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2009
- Messages
- 1,841
Received my chamber and 'juice' from Curtis today. Here are pictures of the chamber and juice. I am not re-posting them because my chamber and gallon of juice looks just the one on his site.
1. Packaging. Wow. Everything was shrink-wrapped and surrounded by plastic insulation. Everything. Even the hose. Not one mark on any part. The box was excellently packaged.
1.5 This is high quality stuff. You can just tell that Curtis took a lot of time and effort building this. It looks good.
2. After unpacking and assembling, (a total of 5 minutes) I chose 10 blanks to stabilize. 5 black walnut burl blanks that I am going to use for razor handles, and 5 spalted blanks.
3. Followed the video directions.
4. Hooked it up to my tired old Gast rotary vane vacuum pump. It pulled a 25.3 inHg. It died after 4 minutes (tired ol' thing) and so I hooked up my $15 Harbor Freight venturi vacuum pump and it drew an amazing 28.5 to 29 inHg.
5. Bubbles went away after about 35 minutes. Let soak for another 30 minutes.
6. Took out, drained (saved the left over resin in a pickle jar), wrapped in aluminum foil and cooked at 200 degrees for 45 minutes.
I have to say it looks like close to 100% saturation. They are hard and ready to be cut and turned. The other good thing is that this resin is reactive to blue-light, so if you want to know what kind of penetration you have, get a cheapo blue-light and cut one down the middle and see!
This was a completely simple, easy, clean way to stabilize my blanks. I could have easily put in another 10 blanks or more in this chamber.
Curtis has really hit a home-run on this one.
1. Packaging. Wow. Everything was shrink-wrapped and surrounded by plastic insulation. Everything. Even the hose. Not one mark on any part. The box was excellently packaged.
1.5 This is high quality stuff. You can just tell that Curtis took a lot of time and effort building this. It looks good.
2. After unpacking and assembling, (a total of 5 minutes) I chose 10 blanks to stabilize. 5 black walnut burl blanks that I am going to use for razor handles, and 5 spalted blanks.
3. Followed the video directions.
4. Hooked it up to my tired old Gast rotary vane vacuum pump. It pulled a 25.3 inHg. It died after 4 minutes (tired ol' thing) and so I hooked up my $15 Harbor Freight venturi vacuum pump and it drew an amazing 28.5 to 29 inHg.
5. Bubbles went away after about 35 minutes. Let soak for another 30 minutes.
6. Took out, drained (saved the left over resin in a pickle jar), wrapped in aluminum foil and cooked at 200 degrees for 45 minutes.
I have to say it looks like close to 100% saturation. They are hard and ready to be cut and turned. The other good thing is that this resin is reactive to blue-light, so if you want to know what kind of penetration you have, get a cheapo blue-light and cut one down the middle and see!
This was a completely simple, easy, clean way to stabilize my blanks. I could have easily put in another 10 blanks or more in this chamber.
Curtis has really hit a home-run on this one.
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