Lexan window cracks - help needed

Discussion in 'Materials' started by Wynand N, Apr 8, 2009.

  1. peter radclyffe
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    peter radclyffe Senior Member

    i have used antisilicone & a razor blade for releasing perspex, but i cant say if its ok for your windows, you can make a frame out of brunzeel ply, ali or stainless, if you want it belt & braces bolting thru the plastic is not the way, because of point loading, since you have so many different materials on a boat you have to isolate the most brittle from the solid surround, look closely at why car windows survive,
     
  2. usa marine
    Joined: Apr 2009
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    usa marine Junior Member

    glass

    why not replace them with glass. you can obtain up to 1/2" -or 12mm/

    Thanks
    Guill
    USA MArine Windows Mfg Inc.
     
  3. Ad Hoc
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    Ad Hoc Naval Architect

    Wynand

    I'd be interested to hear what the results are.
    I've used Lexan on many fast ferries before, and all glued too. Never had any problems. So this is indeed interesting and a mystery.

    Notes on the bolt and glue...makes sense in the big blue (I think I would too)!
     
  4. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    Wynand
    I have a lot of experience with glass also various polycarbonate's
    what got you was the drilling
    you should have burned through with an iron
    nd not even touched it with a drill
    that will always cause micro fracturing that will eventually lead to a crack
    even if you then try and touch it up with an iron after
    what you needed to do was hit it with welding solution
    also plastics need so much breathing room that we typically never recommend them in applications over a few sq ft
    it was even placing them under slight bolt pressure that illicited the cracks to run
    funny thing is you might be able to fix it
    if you take the window out and put it on a flat surface there is a plastic welding solution that through capillary action might just seal it all back together so well that all you will need to do is flame off the surface and it could look like new
    it takes talent to be that good with the weld but Ive seen guys who can do it
    if you need some welding solution I could mail you some as its available just down the street from me

    as for bolting the windows back in
    dont do it
    eventually those bolts will get up against the sides of one of the plastic and begin chewing into it
    possibly causing another crack
    you want to float all glazing all the time

    I have another post concerning glazing that I wrote for a newbe
    let me go cut and paste it so you can get an idea of what Im on about
    feel free to ignore the impertinent parts
    but there is a decent description of how to float glass in a opening
     
  5. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    tempered glass is best
    but there are some important considerations

    tempered glass as has been mentioned will scratch easier than annealed
    its surface is actually made softer by the tempering process

    there are various tempering processed which produce various levels of strength so be carefull what you buy

    the edges of tempered glass are its Achilles heal, they should be floated above any hard surfaces on glass blocks ( non expanded neoprene is best )
    two blocks on each side placed a few inches in from each corner
    you want two inches of blocking per block for each twenty lbs of glass
    dont go by sq ft as the UBC states because they wrote it for 1/4 and you should go with 3/8 or better

    laminated tempered is best in high risk applications

    use a 3m blast resistant film in really really high risk applications on the interior only as it scratches easily but will prevent flying micro chips in case of a blow out

    you cant really combine the laminates between temp and not temp because the bending characteristics are so different
    which means that if you get hit by a sneaker wave the outer layer of annealed glass would likely crack although the inner temp would remain stable

    the glass should be stopped into place not relying on glue to hold it at any point
    sealant holds out the water
    stops hold in the glass

    use a steal frame
    it has the closest expansion and contraction characteristics to glass and so when the sun hits it they will move together placing the least resistance on the sealant

    use sealant not a gasket
    there is basically no gasketing system that has yet to be actually waterproof
    the rubber contracts in cold airs and will leave a gap somewhere no mater how well you do the job

    double sided sticky tape works ok
    but EDPM tape is better
    this tape should be applied to the frame in contact with the glass face and the stop
    not the glass
    its structural and wont compress to much and you can bridge over it easily with the sealant

    bridge bead the sealant

    Sikaflex is your best bet on sealant
    takes forever to dry but remains flexible and sticks to just about anything

    sill glaze is a silicone product but also works well
    you cant paint it

    you have to paint Sika

    clean the living crap out of the bare metal surfaces with denatured alcohol before you begin the process and again before you seal it

    if you have oil or grease on the metal and you dont clean it off with some kind of solvent and then clean again with the alcohol you going to have a leak

    stops
    the best stop system is one that allows easy repair
    the inside stop should be monolithic to the frame for best strength
    the outside stop should be screwed in with sufficient number of screws to counter act any possibility of a blow out by a factor of 3
    and Ive seen tornado's that will suck the bark off a tree
    so do not underestimate the power of this force

    counter sink all the screw's in the stops and use Philips head screw's
    why people even consider flat head is a mystery to me
    but they sure end up breaking a lot of glass
    square drive is ok but no reason to get silly with the screw's
    just get good solid large diameter screw's made out of the same stuff as the frame
    steal
    yes they may rust if you dont treat em right
    so treat em right

    pay em with silicone an cap em with Sika after cleaning the living crap again out of the counter sunk area so the Sika sticks
    Sika doesnt like to stick to silicone or silicone residue so clean it or die

    you need the screw's to expand and contract "breath" with the frame or they will work
    bad sitch
    that will eventually break a window as fast as anything else will
    and when you least expect it

    stops should be square section
    irregular shapes stops can place undue stresses on the glass

    screw's need to be paid in
    but not with a glue like substance or at least to strong a one
    I tend to use any old bar soap or wax when applied in wood but your in metal so you will want something that will prevent water infiltration
    for Christ sakes dont use epoxy or Sika you will never get the dam screw out
    I tend to use silicone as it will break free easily in this application

    [​IMG]
     
  6. Wynand N
    Joined: Oct 2004
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    Wynand N Retired Steelboatbuilder

    Thanks for the input thus far.

    I decided to dump the Lexan and got a piece of Perspex 12mm thick to install as a test run on the smallest window with only a curvature of 4mm over about 650mm that is basically a flat surface.

    Done everything by the book and burned the holes through with a blunt drill bit. All burr was removed with a sharp Stanley knive on the holes. No counter sunk this time around.
    The Perspex was primed and a generous layer of Sika 295 applied and window bedded onto frame. All bolts slipped loosely through holes and we start tightening from the centre out - much the same way one torque a cylinder head. Everything went fine until the very last bolt was tightened. Just when it start to tighten up, there was a snap like a whip cracking and the Prespex cracked from the hole and suddenly its mate also cracked.:(

    At the time the last bolt went in the little curvature of the Perspex was already taken up with the first bolts installed, and the mystery is why did the last one screwed up the window?

    Perhaps it is best I therma-bend the glass with hot air until it lies snug against the frame and just Sika it into place sans the holes and bolts. Again, that decision has to be taken by my client.
    I had fitted many a window as a builder - all Perspex - many of them with plenty of curvature and holes counter sunk with no **** ever, this is a first for me and drives me up the wall.
    BTW, a window of the laminated Lexan to Perspex units that cracked badly on the Lexan sides only, was sent to Johannesburg to Lexan people for an analysis of it as they cannot believe it either.

    Perhaps someone out there has a little Voodoo doll with my name on it:?: Please Manie, take my name out of your blacklist ....otherwise I have to go and see my witchdoctor down the road.:eek:
     

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  7. Ad Hoc
    Joined: Oct 2008
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    Ad Hoc Naval Architect

    wynand

    Ahh...getting interesting now.
    The bolts, are these each normal to the lexan?
    The frames the window sits in, are these normal to the lexan?
    Finally, are all 4 bolt locations in-plane with each other?

    Since a triangle is always in-plane with itself.

    Take 3 random points in space, join them, you have a triangle, and the triangle is fair and in-plane.

    However it is impossible to do this with 4 points, if the 4 points are not in-plane. Therefore the Q's above.

    It may well be that one of your bolts, or even all of them, are not in-plane with the others. As such, when you tighten the last bolt (the first 3 could all be out of plane, but in-plane with each other) this creates an in-plane eccentric load. This is stressing up your lexan.

    I get the impression this could well be the cause, from what you have written above.

    All 4 bolts are not in-plane nor normal to the lexan.
     
  8. Manie B
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    Manie B Senior Member

    he he Wynand wasn't me

    i aint got staaaaafffoooool to do with your bad karma

    from my previous post you know that i have a rather "negative disposition" to Lexan (how's that for smart English):D

    but the plot thickens even further

    as you know i was sailing in Durban this easter weekend because i am working towards my DOC (Durban Operators Cerificate, without which very soon you wont be able to get in and out of the harbour - period)

    so anyway while down there i had a good look at


    you guessed right


    WINDOWS :p :p :p


    so well just for the record

    laminated safety glass (flat) is IN

    lexan is OUT



    not that i want to rain on anybodies parade
    but struggle on :p
    i am sitting here on the side lines taking it all in


    NOW GET THAT BLOOMIN BOAT FINISHED
    **** i want to sail on her before i am a seriously old fart :D
     
  9. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    Ive cut mountains of that stuff by scoring and snapping and always made it a point to never bolt through but always clamp with whatever glassing system I used

    if you cut the piece on a table saw or some other type cutting tool you have loaded the edge with micro fractures just waiting for that little bit of pressure it takes to snap it just as if you had scored the surface instead of the edge

    you must snap all edges and flame them off before you bed the piece
    also give up on the bolts and let the piece float in the frame on glass blocks
    bolt the stops in parallel to the glassing
    if the frame has the bolts to close to the edge to allow you to miss the piece then use a rubber grommet in each hole to protect the edge of the plastic from the metal
    it only takes a micro-fracture to start a run like what Im seeing in your pictures


    best
    and sorry to hear you are having such problems
    you need not heat bend non laminated plastics as they remember a deformation just fine
    once you place the piece in the frame a simple hair dryer will do the trick just fine if you wish to relieve any stress on the piece immediately

    Q
    am I seeing that picture correctly
    is there no frame or supporting structure surrounding the edge of that glassing

    Q
    did you flame off all your edges and use welding fluid on all holes to clean up any micro-fractures
    a utility knife is not adequate to prepare an edge to finish as it to will leave fractures that could lead to a run

    once again
    best of luck
    B
     
  10. Manie B
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    Manie B Senior Member

    oh and even Beneteau with all the smart windows and hatches

    couple of years in the Durban sun and you cant see thru

    all gone hazy with millions of fine little cracks all over

    enjoy :rolleyes:
     

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  11. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    the binders in all plastics photodegrade rapidly
    leading to that milky appearance so often associated with plastic
    also plastic scratches so easily that even just salt crystals that form on its surface can scratch it if disturbed

    laminated tempered is the way to go
    and the thickness is nearly unlimited
    the New England aquarium had 9" windows for there big tank
    laminated out of 1/4

    I prefer filmed tempered in most overhead applications but on shipboard installations of any kind I have consistently gone with triple laminated tempered with out a single blow out
    ever

    stuff is virtually bullet proof
    3/4 tipple lami with blast resistant film will stop a bullet I think its up to a .44 cal without breaking the inner light

    dont quote me on that Ill have to look it up but the specs for bullet proof are clearly in favor of multiple layers of glass

    you can get bulletproof plastics but they are generally single layers they do not hold blast resistant films well and do not survive multiple strikes nearly as well

    getting back on track the most likely reason Wynand is having problems is because of either that the screws are contacting the edges of the holes and scoring them creating the start to a run or because of improper detailing of the cut edges
    IE
    even if you score and snap that stuff its still necessary to flame it clean before you do anything else with it

    I would not recommend any drilling of any kind on plastic
    specifically because of micro fracturing
    always use a soldering iron or a heated punch to burn through
    then clean up the hole buy breaking off the slag with your fingers and then flame it clean with a plumbers torch

    best of luck and if Im seeing that correctly there is no compression ring around the edges of that window

    bad plan mate
    all glassing should be in a compression ring (stopped) and floated then bridge beaded to a adequate sealant surface
    IE
    never try to bead to the edge of a thin piece of metal
    always allow for a decent contact of sealant in setting were the bead can be inspected and repaired with out having to dismantle the hole window

    best of luck
    B
     
  12. marshmat
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    marshmat Senior Member

    Wynand,

    Perspex and its counterparts from other brands, ie. poly(methyl-methacrylate) is in fairly common use in the physics lab where I've been spending most of my time lately. We use a fair bit of polycarbonate as well. Strange cracks such as you're getting here are not uncommon with the weird shapes that are sometimes needed for the labs.

    The explanation I got from our shop guys was similar to what Mr. Boston suggested above: Any time a sharp-edged cutter (band saw, drill, etc.) touches the stuff cold, you end up with microfractures at the cut edge. Sometimes you can't even see them, other times there are slight, sharp changes in the refractive properties of the clear sheet near the hole. But unless it's re-annealed somehow, the fractures are there, complete with built-in stresses, just waiting to cause problems.

    On one project a few years ago, we couldn't see the fractures at all until the acrylic cement was applied to bond the parts together- at which point the edge suddenly went all cracked and crazed in a matter of minutes. Mechanical stress applied once this had happened would sometimes cause the PMMA (or sometimes polycarbonate) sheet to develop long, arcing cracks similar to the ones in your photos.

    The obvious solution- avoid stress concentrations- isn't enough, because the micro-cracks lead to enormous stress concentrations no matter how much you spread out the load on the fastener. I've been told that there are special annealing techniques that can be done after cutting, but before fitting, to avoid this. I believe it consists of heating the sheet to near its glass transition temperature for a certain period of time, so that the area near the microcracks can regain its original amorphous structure, but I don't know the details.

    Still, I've basically given up on mechanical fasteners for these plastics.... the way commercial windows are now done, with either a pressure plate or a structural adhesive, seems to work better.

    Sika 295 is too flexible to cause this kind of stress (and it's not strong or hard enough to damage Perspex- it tears at 160 psi, shore A is only 35), so I don't think that's your problem. Somehow, there is enough of a stress concentration at one or more of those bolt holes to set the microfractures loose.


    Edit- the glass transition temperature for the annealing is approx. 124 C and the melting point is about 130, so you have a 6-degree C range in which the annealing will work as intended.
     
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2009
  13. Boston

    Boston Previous Member

    well said
    Im going to have to use that next time I want to charge someone a fortune for flaming there edges

    what all that means Mr Wynand is that your going to take a regular old turbo torch ( plumbers torch ) and pass it slowly but not so slowly that you deform the surface of the material over the cut surface
    carefully going back and forth untill you have a clear surface at the edge similar to what you have on the surface

    a little practice and you will have a perfectly clear edge and not have damaged the ocular quality of the surface in its vicinity
    the thicker the piece the easier it is

    best of luck
    and thanks for seconding me on that Mr Mellow I was beginning to think I was the only one who ever worked with the stuff on any kind of regular basis

    cheers
    B
     
  14. Jimbo1490
    Joined: Jun 2005
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    Jimbo1490 Senior Member

    We fit acrylic and polycarbonate glazing in aircraft and face the cracking issue all the time. One helpful hint is to always allow a generous amount of expansion room around the entire window. For a very long pane, this will require that the lengthwise expansion room be proportional to the length. On a square pane of perhaps a 1/2 meter I would allow somewhere between 6 and 10 mm free space between the edges of the pane and other structure. This implies large flanges for the windows and a flexible sealant, perhaps even a non-hardening sealant.

    It gets even trickier for through hole fasteners. The through hole must be generously sized. For a 6mm bolt, the hole should be at least 10mm, 12 would be OK. Cutting the edges of the holes out (so that they become slots rather than through-holes) is another good option.

    As Boston mentioned, it is really preferable to clamp rather than through-bolt plastic glazing as this solves many problems in one fell swoop.

    There are specially ground drill bits (available at Grainger, MSC, J&L here in the States, your local machine shop supply where you are) that reduce the microcracking when drilling plastics.

    After drilling, you can anneal with a 'clean' heat source such as a hydrogen torch, or a plastic welder, which is probably more readily available, and less potentially damaging.

    Jimbo
     

  15. Steve W
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    Steve W Senior Member

    Ive had lots of challenges in over 35yrs of boatbuilding and repair work but fortunatly windows have not been one of them.From what i read on these forums i do just about everything "wrong" and yet in several hundred windows i have never had a cracked window that i know of.I have used glass ,polycarbonate and acrylic and all have their strengths and weakneses.My sons 25ft boat which i built 22yrs ago still has the original windows which are lexan screwed to the outside with countersunk screws on silicone,no cracks,no leaks bot will need replacing sometime as you havnt been able to see clearly out of them for years.This is my only complaint about polycarbonate. I currently have a C&C sailboat which had 3/8" acrylic windows bonded into molded rabbets with no fasteners, there is curvature in the cabinsides and the adhesive had failed at the ends and both the windows were broken top to bottom and came out in several pieces so they didnt need fastener holes to cause them to crack and they had plenty of room around them to allow for thermal expansion so i dont know why they broke but this is very common with C&Cs. I used a combination approach to replace them using 3/8"acrylic cut to allow a generous, even gap between the plexi and the edge of the rabbet. I used a minimum of countersunk machine screw as a belt and suspenders approach,i installed the windows on a thin glazing tape on the inner edge and then pumped in silpruf 2000 silicone which stops at the glazing tape,then tooled it off on the outside with a wet finger.I tend to mask off everything and dont use solvent to clean up if possible.
    When i instal a plastic window on the outside of a cabin with no frame or rabbet i drill the holes with a special grind bit,countersink it,mask the cabinside,position it on the cabinside and mark the hole on the boat with a vix self centering bit and run a knife around the window to cut the masking, remove the window and drill the holes thru using a drill guide to keep them square,i then prep all the faying surfaces, then i glue thin plastic flat washers to each hole on the cabinside with superglue,this allows me to tighten the fasteners snug without squeezing out all the silicone,i then install the window and the next day peel the masking.
    Steve.
     
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