Editing Making Micarta scale material

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Now there isn’t much mystery about the actual mechanics of making Micarta. At its simplest it is resin-impregnated material which is pressed together.  There are some fancy ways of doing this using hydraulic presses or vacuum bag outfits, but since most of us have more modest budgets, we will be applying pressure to the Micarta with simple wood clamps.  The writer has seen others who used two, flat pieces of wood for the purpose of pressing the Micarta. Our approach is slightly different in that while a piece of wood will serve as the top half of the press, the bottom half of the press will be a thick slab of stone. Since stone does not bend, it guarantees that at least one surface of the finished Micarta is properly flat. By the way, that is a slab of Belgian Blue Stone. The better grades are sometimes used for inexpensive hones, but around here in Belgium it mostly serves for door thresholds, floor tiles and window ledges. It is so common that people throw away used bits of it without a second thought.  
 
Now there isn’t much mystery about the actual mechanics of making Micarta. At its simplest it is resin-impregnated material which is pressed together.  There are some fancy ways of doing this using hydraulic presses or vacuum bag outfits, but since most of us have more modest budgets, we will be applying pressure to the Micarta with simple wood clamps.  The writer has seen others who used two, flat pieces of wood for the purpose of pressing the Micarta. Our approach is slightly different in that while a piece of wood will serve as the top half of the press, the bottom half of the press will be a thick slab of stone. Since stone does not bend, it guarantees that at least one surface of the finished Micarta is properly flat. By the way, that is a slab of Belgian Blue Stone. The better grades are sometimes used for inexpensive hones, but around here in Belgium it mostly serves for door thresholds, floor tiles and window ledges. It is so common that people throw away used bits of it without a second thought.  
  
[[File:Ignatz Making Micarta Scale Material-04 stone.jpg |thumb | right | A stone slab with some of the components used in this tutorial on top of it ]]
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[[File:Ignatz Making Micarta Scale Material-04 stone.jpg |thumb | right | A stone slab, and some components used in this tutorial on top of it ]]
  
 
The stone is supported on two blocks of wood so that the wood clamps used to apply the pressure will have some clearance away from the table top. On top of the stone you can see a sheet of paper. This is a special sort of silicon treated baking paper which is intended for use in the kitchen (cookies, bread, etc.). It is heat resistant and nothing sticks to it at all, so it is the ideal stuff to keep our epoxy-drenched Micarta lay-up from sticking to the stone. On the top of the lay-up stack will come a second piece of this silicon-treated paper baking paper, this time to separate the lay-up from that top slab of wood on which the clamps are exerting their force. Standing on top of it all are parts A and B of the epoxy (resin and hardener). Most usually, epoxies are so formulated that one mixes equal portions of both components to obtain the working resin mix, but in this case the ratio is 2 parts resin to 1 part hardener. Again, read the instructions for your own epoxy very carefully.  
 
The stone is supported on two blocks of wood so that the wood clamps used to apply the pressure will have some clearance away from the table top. On top of the stone you can see a sheet of paper. This is a special sort of silicon treated baking paper which is intended for use in the kitchen (cookies, bread, etc.). It is heat resistant and nothing sticks to it at all, so it is the ideal stuff to keep our epoxy-drenched Micarta lay-up from sticking to the stone. On the top of the lay-up stack will come a second piece of this silicon-treated paper baking paper, this time to separate the lay-up from that top slab of wood on which the clamps are exerting their force. Standing on top of it all are parts A and B of the epoxy (resin and hardener). Most usually, epoxies are so formulated that one mixes equal portions of both components to obtain the working resin mix, but in this case the ratio is 2 parts resin to 1 part hardener. Again, read the instructions for your own epoxy very carefully.  

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