
Gelcoat
Gelcoat is common in composite and marine work. It can create a smooth, durable surface and is often used in mold-related workflows.
Common Uses
Gelcoat may be useful for:
- Composite mold masters
- Fiberglass tooling
- Marine-style parts
- Smooth pattern surfaces
- Large display models
- Tooling surfaces
- Mold preparation workflows
Advantages
Gelcoat can provide:
- Smooth surface
- Durable finish
- Composite workflow compatibility
- Good appearance
- High-build surface
- Sanding and polishing potential
- Mold-friendly surface when properly applied
Disadvantages
Gelcoat is process-sensitive:
- Material compatibility matters
- Cure and catalyst control are important
- Styrene exposure concerns in polyester gelcoats
- Shrinkage
- Cracking if applied incorrectly
- Surface prep required
- Not ideal over all 3D printed plastics without testing
- Can be labor-intensive
JaegerTech View
Gelcoat is useful for composite-adjacent work, but it should be tested with the printed material and coating stack. For many 3D printed masters, epoxy surfacing may be the safer first layer.
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