by orphanedcowboy » Thu Nov 07, 2013 9:12 am
You can use Bondo squeegees instead of rollers. Put down a thin coat of resin to hold the glass, then add a little resin on top of the glass and use the squeegee to work it out. A hairdryer helps to thin the resin, just don't get it too hot. You'll know when it is right, the glass will become clear instead of opaque.
Mix small amounts of resin at a time until you learn how it works, the larger mixes will have an exothermic reaction and waste resin.
I put my boats out in the sun and let them heat up prior to and glassing, this allows the pores of the wood to open and soak up a little resin, making it even stiffer. Just enough resin to wet the surface evenly prior to adding the glass, a helper holding one end up as you use a squeegee to work it down with no wrinkles works best, but you can start it down and place a small piece of PVC pipe under the glass, as you work it down by yourself, just move the PVC pipe away from you to help remove wrinkles.
I have been doing glassing and glass repair for close to 18yrs, and this method will use the least amount of resin and still work all of the air out.
A little tip, use 3-4 sets of examination gloves on top of each other, when one gets dirty, just pull it off and you have a clean glove and don't have to stop and change them out.