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| I have seen some confessions of rod builders on Fishnet who have set fire to their epoxied bindings - but it takes a direct flame application and is the exception, not the rule. Is also kind of amusing to those of us with twisted senses of humour I'd be very worried about acetone if you use it though. Personally I have a bad habit of forgetting to put the lid back on because it is usually used when epoxy gets somewhere it shouldn't be and I'm in a hurry. This, combined with an open flame could be very nasty.
__________________ Cheers, Bob the labrat |
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#6
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| If you have a normal closed combustion heater you should not have any problems with normal safe use of solvents at normal safe distances from the heater. If you have high concentrations of solvents the size of the ignition source is irrelivent it might be a light switch or some sort of spark.... high concentrations of solvent are a problem in them selves. As for the wood heater.....it prsents its own hazard.....if you operste it with proper clearances and proper care it should not be a problem. OH BTW... it isnt a pot belly stove is it?......those things need FOUR FEET clearance all arround for all but masonry for safe operation... and a hearth 8 feet across.......you don't want one of those in your shed unles you have a great deal of space. Oh another thaught........good ventilation ( read flowing fresh air) is recommended when using epoxy, how does that go with you heating plans? cheers
__________________ Any thing with sharp teeth eats meat. Most powertools have sharp teeth. People are made of meat. Abrasives can be just as dangerous as a blade.....and 10 times more painfull. |
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#7
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| Here it is guys. Havent quite finished installing the flu etc. but almost done. Should keep us very toasty! |
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#8
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| Good on ya! I need 1 of those! I was working in the shed this weekend & thought it was feeling a tad cold so i checked the thermometer & it was 6c at 1pm ouch! Makes doing a glue up a real problem. |
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#9
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| You'll be wanting to move those bookcases away before you light 'er up !! Can't begin to tell you how envious I am from my open back verandah down in Aberfoyle ! cheerss AJ |
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#10
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| Not sure that I can to be honest. What is teh worst that will happen? I assume the varnish will probably peel or blister but it wont catch will it? |
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#11
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| The worst that can happen... no more shed. or contents. (you asked...) I built brick walls around 3 sides of my drum heater a couple of decades ago. Even banked down, the bricks facing the drum got too hot to touch, and they were twice the distance of the closer book-shelf. Find another home for it, or put in a heat shield of some sort. A 500mm x 1000mm strip of fibro or galv standing on end between the two would probably do the job. cheers AJ |
| Tags |
| epoxy, flamable |