O J, I've used Git-Rot to bond a white oak sampson post to a fiberglass deck and it worked just fine. The sampson post was a better fit than I could have wished for, and there wasn't enough space in the hole for a normal sealant. So I just dammed the area around the sampson post under the deck, and squirted Git-Rot down the sliver of a crack. It filled every little space, set hard, and made a perfect fit.Oswego John wrote:Dean and John V
I have never used Git-Rot when working on fiberglass or other man-made substances so I can't comment on it. I don't see why it wouldn't do the job. I imagine that it would penetrate porous material better than plain, two part epoxy
I have used Git-Rot several times on dry rot with good results. I had always been under the impression that the formula for it was developed to be osmotically absorbed into cellulose material (wood) to repair and strengthen it. It would be interesting to find out how it would work with fiberglass, etc.
O J
Git-Rot actually works by capillary attraction, not osmosis, but the result is the same. It gets to places where thicker liquids wouldn't.
Incidentally, I believe butterflies are the result of caterpillary atttraction. Something I learned in Lepidopterous Sex-Ed 101.
Cheers,
John V.