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Divinycell?   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #5044 of 6625 |
Re: [harryproa] Divinycell?

Hi,

Actually I am currently planning on using Airex for the keels, since the R63 is "flexible", but I have never seen it. I did finally reach the company to ship a sample, which I hope to get soon. I cannot, however, find anyone who sells it online in North America. I have heard from others in teh US that it is impossible to buy single sheets and I don't want an entire box to start with for my "starter" project.

How do the prices of Divinycell and Airex (and Corecell) compare where you are?

Thanks,
- Gardner

On Fri, Feb 6, 2009 at 2:37 PM, <arttuheinonen@...> wrote:

Divinycell is a swedish product, widely used among boatyards in
scandinavia and around the world. We used it on our boat, cant complain.
Airex has better elastic properties, if top quality impact resistance is
wanted I would use Airex. Divinycell is a good quality structural foam.
Divinycell has different qualities too but I have no experience on them.
Our balestron boom is made of 100kg/m2 Divinycell foam and Amroy
Hybtonite epoxy.

http://www.diabgroup.com/europe/products/e_prods_2.html

Regards,

Arttu



> Hi,
> I have been comparing specs and prices on core materials, mostly corecell
> and nidacore (can't find a place to buy polycore in the US), but I just
> looked divinycell. The specs looks the same as corecell, but the price is
> about half of corecell, or twice of nidacore. Does anyone know why we don't
> see more use of divinycell?
>
> In case anyone wants to see the specs posted together, I have started
> accumulating some info on my googlepages site
> sites.google.com/site/gardnerpomper/Home/sailing/building
>
> I guess with some of the recent posts about the honeycomb and edge binding
> and possible water filtration, is divinycell a reasonable compromise between
> the price of corecell and honeycomb?
>
> Thanks,
>
> - Gardner Pomper
> York, PA




Fri Feb 6, 2009 8:03 pm

gardnerpomper
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Message #5044 of 6625 |
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Hi, I have been comparing specs and prices on core materials, mostly corecell and nidacore (can't find a place to buy polycore in the US), but I just looked...
Gardner Pomper
gardnerpomper
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Feb 6, 2009
6:01 pm

Divinycell is a swedish product, widely used among boatyards in scandinavia and around the world. We used it on our boat, cant complain. Airex has better...
arttuheinonen@...
proabuilder
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Feb 6, 2009
7:37 pm

Hi, Actually I am currently planning on using Airex for the keels, since the R63 is "flexible", but I have never seen it. I did finally reach the company to ...
Gardner Pomper
gardnerpomper
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Feb 6, 2009
8:03 pm

Hi , I would not bother using Airex for the keels. It is possible to bend Divinycell using heat gun, or cutting grooves on to it. I recall Divinycell is 2/3 of...
arttuheinonen@...
proabuilder
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Feb 7, 2009
6:52 am

Hi, I am using DivinyCell H-80 to build my 9.2 cat here is the link to photos of the KSS building workshop ...
multihulldynamics32
multihulldyn...
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Feb 7, 2009
2:32 pm

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