i am just going to glass over the foam, i am not going to make a mold of it....if i plan on making a mold i will just copy it when i complete the whole build
Are you removing the foam when you are done?
I don't have near the experience Tom does, so take his advice over mine.
Anytime I am working with something in which I will remove the foam or the materials I used to make the shape I want, I tend to favor 2lb 2-part foam and bondo. I may be switching to 4lb foam as I have heard 2lb shrinks and I have had lots of problem with my plugs where my foam has pulled in and taken my bondo with it.
If I were rockering a B1, where I was going to be cutting out the hull, then adding foam, glassing, then removing the foam, I would do the following...
- i would tape off the inside of the hull with packing tape (use good tape that doesn't rip easily, the foam wont stick to it) and paper in all the areas I don't want foam to stick
-I would pour 2 or 4lb foam into the hull where I plan to cut into the hull, and let it fill out from there.
-then cut the original hull, and shape my glass to mostly where I want to be.
-Once I have my shape, I would cover it with a thin layer of bondo and sand it mostly smooth.
-cut all pieces of glass and lay them out to be ready for layup
- I would be sure all the original SMC on the outside of the hull is sanding with 80grit or heavier paper and clean with acetone to have a good surface.
-I would tape off (painters tape) all the original hull so I can only see the bondo.
- then wax the bondo with mold release wax, do not use PVA.
-remove the painters tape so I have a nice clean line of waxed bondo and preped SMC
-Layup my glass
-after it is all dry, I would go on the inside of the boat, and rip out all of the bondo and foam
-sand the new glass and the old SMC, then lay up glass on the inside so the new glass makes a sandwitch out of the old SMC
Glass is fine to lay over foam. However, glass doesn't like to stick to foam. Glass will stick much better to waxed bondo which will make it easier to lay over tighter contours. Also, foam pores soak up and waste a lot of resin. Additionally, to lay up and prep the inside, you have to sand off all that resin coated foam to get a clean surface for your inside layup. If you bondo, layup, remove bondo, you get easier layup on the outside, then a nice clean smooth surface ready for layup (after sanding and cleaning) for your other layup or paint.
Edit: If you are not going to remove the foam, do not use bondo. The above method is only if you are going to cut the hull and remove the foam afterwards. I am assuming you are going to be cutting and removing to rocker.