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A:
Cure
inhibition occurs when a surface contaminate prevents a mold
rubber or casting resin from curing as expected.
Experiencing Inhibition When Making A Mold – When making a mold, cure inhibition occurs when
contaminants on a model surface prevent the liquid mold
rubber from properly curing. While the cured rubber mold may
look fine, you will discover that inhibition occurred at the
interface between the rubber and the model’s surface. The
rubber will be sticky and not fully cured.
For
example, applying latex, urethane or silicone rubber directly
over a model made of clay containing sulfur will result in
cure inhibition. The sulfur in the clay is preventing the
rubber from curing. The rubber may appear fine on the
outside, but anywhere the rubber touched the clay, it is
sticky and will never cure. Remedy: Apply a suitable
sealer
Not Allowing A Sealing Agent To Dry
or time to
“flash off” prior to applying release agent or mixing and
applying mold rubber over your model. Remedy: After
applying the required number of coats, let your sealing agent
dry thoroughly (30 minutes should be enough) before applying
release agent (if necessary) or mold rubber.
Be aware;
Humidity will affect the evaporation rate of solvents. The
more humid the environment, the longer a sealer or sealer /
release combination will take to dry. In more humid
environments (80% RH), these solvents can take a couple of
days to dry or may never dry depending on the solvent.
Also, if you use a solvent based sealer such as shellac or
acrylic and then use a liquid release agent over the top of
that, the solvent in the liquid release may "re-liquify" the
shellac or acrylic and additional time is necessary to let
everything dry.
Applying
Rubber Into/Over Rubber - Some mold rubbers are not compatible with others. For example,
condensation cure silicones will not cure when applied against
an addition cure silicone, and vice-versa.
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