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41,24,1","250.00,26,2","250-350f,24,1","25085-99-8,39,1","25265-17-2,42,1","254,24,4","25-50,42,1","25ft,7,8","26.00,6,1,29,1","26.50,29,1","26.7,24,1","260c,4,1","265.2,4,1,24,2","2650.00,29,1","26950-63-0,40,1,41,1","27,44,1","27.1oz,7,1","27.7,24,3","270°f,41,1","272.00,9,1,30,1","2735,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","275,42,1","27ft,4,1","28.2oz,7,1","28.50,29,1","28.75,9,1,30,1","28.98,29,1","28.99,9,2,30,1","28064-14-4,39,1","281,24,4","281g,37,1","284,24,1","285°f,46,1","2855-13-2,42,1,43,1","29,37,1,44,1","29.00,8,1","29.19,30,1","29.37,4,1","29.49,29,1","29.74,30,1","29.99,9,1,29,1","2900,47,1","29320-38-5,41,1","2a,39,1","2b,47,1","2nd,30,1,29,1","2oo,44,1","2oz,9,1,30,1","2x,29,2","2x2,16,2,32,1,12,1,14,5,29,4,37,5","2x4,12,1","2x6,29,1","3.0,4,13,7,1","3.00,29,1","3.09,4,4,7,1","3.1,4,2","3.18,24,1","3.19,4,1","3.2,24,4","3.24,4,5","3.25,4,4,7,1","3.29,4,1,7,1","3.3,4,1,24,1","3.32,7,1","3.37,4,1","3.39,4,2,7,1","3.49,4,3,29,1","3.5,7,2,24,6","3.69,4,2","3.7,24,1","3.74,4,6","3.74oz,14,1,29,1","3.75,7,1","3.755,45,1","3.77,24,1","3.79,4,3","3.82,24,6","3.89,4,4","3.9,4,1,24,1","3.98,24,2","3.99,4,7,7,2,8,1,12,1,29,1","30,3,1,4,1,9,2,30,2,25,1,40,3","30.0,24,1","30.4,24,1","30.49,24,1","30.60,29,1","30.7,24,1","30.99,29,1","300,9,1,30,1,17,1","3000,14,1,39,1","301,24,1","3017,24,1","302,46,1,47,1","302gsm,7,1","304,24,1","3050,24,1","30-50,40,1","305gsm,7,1","30ft,4,6,7,1","30ft-49ft,29,3","30lbs,9,1,30,1","31.39,9,2,30,2","31°c,46,1","311,46,1,47,1","312,46,1,47,1","313,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","31326-29-1,40,1","31st,44,1","32&amp,37,1","32.14ft,7,1","32°c,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","322,24,1","325,24,1","32610-77-8,41,1","328,24,1","32fl,9,1,30,1","32ft,4,1","330ksi,6,2","332,24,1","333.5,24,1","334ft,4,1","336,24,1","33714,44,1","338,24,3","338t,4,1","339,24,1","33msi,7,1","34,29,1","34.41,29,1","34.5,24,1","34.99,8,2,29,1","34msi,7,2,24,1","3-4oz,1,1","35,9,2","35.00,27,1","35.2ft,7,1","352,24,1","358g,37,1","3-6,18,1","36.4,4,1","36.79,4,2","36.8,24,3","362,24,1","3650°c,45,1","366,24,1","372,41,1,42,1,49,1,51,1","372. ,48,1","375g,37,1","37ft,4,1","38,29,1,37,1","38.99,29,1","38°c,45,1","383-7668,48,1","38412,46,6","386-1733,48,2","389,24,3","38inches,29,1","39,7,1,29,2","39.49,9,1,30,1","39.8,24,1","39.99,4,1","3914,53,1","3d,14,1,37,1","3digit,27,1","3-dimethaneamine,42,1,43,1","3ft,4,1,15,1","3k,1,2,4,7,6,4,16,2,14,4,29,4,37,8,51,1","3kx1500denier,37,2","3kx3k,14,1,37,3","3rd,29,1","3x1,14,7","3x1weave,14,1","4.0,4,8,24,1","4.0-12.7,4,1","4.09,4,1","4.0oz,9,1,30,1,12,1","4.11,4,1","4.14,24,1","4.1oz,7,1","4.29,4,1","4.31,7,1","4.35,9,1,30,1","4.46,24,2","4.49,4,1,7,1,29,1","4.5,7,1,8,1","4.50,7,1","4.59,4,1","4.6,3,1,24,6","4.61,4,1","4.64,4,1","4.69,4,1","4.6mi,3,1","4.75,7,1","4.79,4,1,7,1","4.7ft,4,1","4.8,8,1,24,3","4.9,24,3","4.99,4,4,7,3,8,1,30,1,29,1","4°c,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","40,4,1,6,1,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,1,48,2,49,1,51,1","40.8,24,1","40°f,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","400°f,39,1","4000f,4,1","400ml,47,6","403,9,2,30,2,24,1","404,9,2,30,2","405,9,2,30,2","40-50min,9,1,30,1","405ft,4,1","406,9,3,30,3","407,9,3,30,3","40-88f,9,1,30,1","40ft,4,1","410,9,4,30,4","416,24,1","41ft,4,1","42,29,1","42.99,29,1","423,45,5","423-05a,45,6","423tm,45,5","4242,44,1","435,47,2","436f,4,1","43oz,9,1,30,1","44.11,4,2","44.2,4,1,24,1","44.99,4,1","440°f,41,1","45,14,3,15,2,29,1","45.00,9,1","45.25,4,1","46.3,24,1","46.47,4,4","46.9,4,1","46.95,4,1","46.99,4,11","46ft,4,1","47,24,1,29,2","47.93,30,1","471,24,1","477,24,1","4-7days,9,1,30,1","48,24,1","48.5,29,1","48.70,4,6","48.8°c,46,1","48.9,24,1","48.99,4,1","480°f,40,1,42,1,43,1","481,24,1","483,24,1","485,24,1","48706,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","48707-0908,38,1","488,24,1","48ft,4,1","49,24,2,37,1,46,1,47,1","49.5,40,1","49°c,39,1","491,24,1","4-9days,9,1,30,1","49ft,4,1","49wide,37,1","4ft,4,1,15,1","4hs,14,1","4mb,5,1,34,1","4oz,1,1,9,3,30,3","4th,29,1","4-trimethylbenzene,47,3","4x1,14,1","4x4,16,1,14,3","5.0,4,6,29,1","5.00,6,2,32,1,27,1","5.08,24,1","5.09,24,6","5.0oz,29,2,37,1","5.15,24,1","5.17,4,3","5.20,4,1","5.21,4,1","5.24,7,1","5.29,4,1,7,1","5.30,4,1","5.39,4,1","5.40,4,1","5.41,24,1","5.42,4,1","5.45,4,1","5.49,4,2","5.4oz,37,2","5.5,24,3","5.50,4,1","5.50z,29,1","5.59,4,1,7,1","5.5oz,9,1,30,1,29,3","5.66,4,1","5.69,4,2,8,1","5.7,24,1","5.70,4,1","5.73,24,2","5.79,4,2,7,1","5.7oz,14,1,29,5,37,1","5.8,24,2","5.89,4,3","5.9,4,2,24,1","5.99,4,7,7,2,9,1,30,1","50,1,1,4,4,24,2,29,14,37,4,39,1,43,1,53,1","50%carbon,37,1","50%orange,37,1","50.00,3,1","50.68,4,2","500,4,1,46,1,47,1","500.00,32,1,27,1","5000,39,1","50ft,7,8,29,3","50inch,29,1","50inches,29,4","50wide,37,2","511,24,1","52.03gal,9,1,30,1","53.99,30,1","530ksi,6,2","535,24,1","54.99,9,1","55,9,1","55.2,4,1,24,1","55.6,24,1","55.99,9,1,30,1","550,4,1","56.12,7,4","56.27,7,1","56ft,4,1","5-6oz,1,1","57214-10-5,42,1","58.67,4,1","58.93,30,1","58.98,9,1,29,1","59.2,29,2","5900,48,1","5ft,4,1,15,1","5hs,14,1","5oz,9,1,30,1","5ppm,39,2","5yrds,29,1","6.0,4,4","6.00,29,2","6.02,29,2","6.0oz,29,1,37,1","6.2,24,1","6.24,7,1","6.25,4,1","6.2oz,29,4","6.3,4,1,24,2","6.36,24,4","6.4,4,1","6.49,29,2","6.5-14,4,1","6.59,4,4","6.6,24,5","6.63,24,1","6.65,4,1","6.69,4,1","6.7,24,1","6.79,4,1,7,1","6.8,15,1","6.89,4,2,7,1","6.99,4,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,29,2","60,1,1,8,1,25,2,38,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","60.25,29,1","60.53,9,1,30,1","600f,24,1","60-100,46,1,47,1","603,1,1,3,4,4,1,5,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,10,1,30,1,32,2,11,1,12,1,19,1,20,1,21,1,22,1,23,1,24,1,25,1,26,1,27,1,29,1,34,1,37,1,38,1,49,2,51,2,52,2","607ft,4,1","60-98f,9,1,30,1","60ft,4,7,7,1","61.92,4,4","6-10,29,3","6230,44,2","63.4,41,1","64.24ft,7,1","64.99,30,1","640ksi,7,1,24,1","64-100f,9,1,30,1","642,3,1,27,1,49,1,51,1","644,47,1","64741-66-8,47,3","64742-48-9,46,3","64sq,9,1,30,1","65,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","65.99,9,1","650,24,1","65wide,37,1","66.3,4,1,24,2","674,24,2","675,24,1","68,45,1","68476-85-7,47,3","68953-36-6,43,1","6-8hrs,9,2,30,2","69,29,1","69.99,4,1","6900,29,1","6ft,4,3","6k,1,1,4,2,14,1,29,1,51,1","6kx6k,37,1","6oz,8,1,9,1,30,1,12,3,29,1","6pm,3,1","7.0,4,4,7,1","7.03,4,3","7.1,4,2","7.11,4,1","7.19,4,1","7.25,7,1","7.26,24,2","7.2oz,29,1","7.46,4,3","7.49,29,2","7.5,4,1,24,4","7.59,4,2","7.6,4,1,24,2","7.63,24,6","7.7,24,2","7.8,24,1","7.99,4,1,7,1,29,2","70-108f,9,1,30,1","703-527-3887,40,1,45,1","70ft,4,1","711ksi,7,3","712,47,1","71-43-2,46,1","727,44,2","728,24,1","72f,9,3,30,3","72hrs,4,1","73.4,24,1","73.99,9,1,30,1","73ft,4,1","7440-44-0,48,1,49,1,51,1","749,46,1","75,24,2","75.00,6,1","75.64,4,5","75.69,4,1","750,48,1,49,1,51,1","75-21-8,39,1","755,46,1","755244,21,1","758,24,1","75ft,7,6","770-nc,47,10","770-nc.pdf,47,4","7782-42-5,45,1","7ft,4,1","7x1,14,2","8.0,4,3","8.00,10,1","8.04,43,1","8.3,4,4,24,4","8.4,24,1","8.45,40,1","8.49,4,1","8.50,24,1","8.51,29,1,42,1","8.51oz,29,1,37,1","8.5oz,7,1,12,1","8.79,4,1","8.7oz,7,1","8.8,29,1","8.85,41,1","8.89,4,2","8.8oz,29,1,37,1","8.9,4,1,7,1,24,2","8.99,4,3,7,2,30,1,29,1","8.9oz,7,1","800,46,1,47,1","800-222-1222,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","800-255-3924,44,1","800-424-9300,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","8052-41-3,47,3","81,24,1","8-11oz,1,1","813,24,1","815,3,1,27,1,49,1,51,1","8-17,4,1","82.9,4,1,24,2","823,44,2","83.4,24,1","83469,47,6","83ft,4,1","840,24,1","85,43,1","860.571.5100,46,2,47,2","860-571-5204,47,1","865,9,2,30,2","866-937-8797,40,1,45,1","87,3,1,8,1,27,1,52,1","87.8°f,46,1","88,48,1","88.2,43,1","883,8,1","885,8,1","8852,53,1","8fl,9,1,30,1","8ft,4,1,7,1","8hs,14,4","8oz,9,1,30,1","9.0,4,4,7,1,24,1","9.01,7,1","9.0oz,7,1,12,1","9.1,4,1,24,2","9.14,4,1","9.2,4,1,24,7","9.33,44,1","9.5,24,1","9.58,43,1","9.6,24,1,39,1","9.63,42,1","9.68,24,1","9.7,24,1","9.8,24,1","9.81,7,1,40,1","9.86,41,1","9.9,24,2","9.92,9,1,30,1","9.99,4,1,7,1,8,1,9,3,30,2","90,14,4,25,2,38,2","90.55,47,1","90°c,52,2","90°f,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","900,4,1","900f,4,1","9046-10-0,40,1,42,1,43,1","908,38,1","9-12hrs,9,2,30,2","9-12min,9,1,30,1","916,48,3","934,5,1,32,2,22,1,23,1,29,1,34,1,37,1,38,1,51,2","938,24,3","95-63-6,47,3","95828,48,1","9593,3,1,27,1,49,1,51,1","95f,9,2,30,2","96,45,1","965,24,1","96ft,4,1","982c,4,1","989-684-1374,38,1","989-684-7286,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","99,48,1,49,1,51,1,53,1","99.24,46,1","99.5,41,1,42,1","998,1,1,3,4,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,10,1,30,1,11,1,12,1,19,1,20,1,21,1,24,1,25,1,26,1,27,1,49,2,52,2","9oz,1,2","9pm,3,1","able,16,1,15,1,25,1","above. ,16,1","abrading,48,1,49,1,51,1","abrasion,9,1,30,1","absence,42,1,43,1","absolutely,37,2","absorb,16,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","absorbed,40,3,41,2,42,2,43,2","absorbent,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,46,1,47,1","absorbents,44,2","absorption,39,2,41,1,42,2,43,1","accept,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,10,2,30,1,19,1,27,6,29,1","acceptance,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,10,1,32,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,29,1,38,1,49,1,51,1","accepts,32,1,38,1","access,32,1,38,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","accessible,48,1,49,1,51,1","accident,16,1,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","accidental,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","accordance,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,46,1,47,1","according,25,1,26,2,46,1,47,1","accordingly,46,1,47,1","account,26,3,27,1","accuracy,14,1,52,1","accurate,7,3,18,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","acetate,52,1","acetone,15,1","acgih,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,4,49,4,51,4","achieve,15,1","acid,46,1,47,1","acids,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2","acme,3,2","acrid,46,1,47,1","across,4,1","act,41,1,42,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","activities,48,3,49,3,51,3","acts,16,1","actual,4,1,32,1,25,1,26,4","actually,4,1,37,1","acute,39,5,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,4,49,4,51,4,53,1","add,4,2,16,2,11,1,15,5,18,3,27,2,29,3","added,4,1,9,1,16,1,30,1,15,2,19,1","adding,18,2","additional,1,1,18,2,26,1,29,1,38,1,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","additive,9,4,30,4","address,3,1,11,1,15,1,23,2,26,6,27,5,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","addresses,23,1","ade,4,1","adequate,32,1,15,1,38,1,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,46,1,47,2,52,1","adequately,45,1,47,1","adhere,13,1","adheres,13,2","adhesive,9,1,30,1","adjustable,8,1","adjusting,16,2,15,1","adjustment,15,1","adopt,46,1,47,1","adsorption,40,1,41,1,42,1","advanced,15,4","advantage,16,3,17,1","advantages,16,1,14,1,17,1","adverse,39,3,48,2,49,2,51,2","advice,45,2,46,1","advisable,46,1,47,1","advise,3,3","advised,44,1","aerosol,47,9","aerosols,47,2","aerospace,1,2,4,22,21,1,24,1,29,2","aesthetic,7,1,16,2,32,1,13,1,37,1","aesthetics,7,1,14,2,15,1,37,2","affairs,46,1,47,2","affects,32,1,38,1","afford,3,1","afterwards,15,1","against,46,1,47,1,53,1","agencies,27,1","agency,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,2","agent,16,2","agents,39,1,44,1,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","aggravated,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","agrees,32,1,38,1","ahead,3,2","aid,39,5,40,5,41,5,42,5,43,5,44,1,45,5,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2,52,1,53,1","aiiiia,17,1","air,8,1,18,1,39,2,40,4,41,3,42,4,43,4,44,1,45,1,46,3,47,3,48,4,49,4,51,4,52,2,53,1","airborne,45,3,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","airframe,4,1","airplane,17,1","airtight,8,1,16,2","airway,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","aka,29,2,37,2","alcohol,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,47,1","aldehydes,40,1,42,1","align,29,3","aliphatic,39,1,40,1,41,1,47,1","alkaline,41,1","alkane,47,1","alkylate,47,3","allergic,39,4,40,1,41,3,42,2,43,2","allergies,39,2,41,1,42,1,43,1","allergy,39,1","allotropic,45,1","allow,4,1,8,1,16,1,14,1,18,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,1","allowed,26,1","allowing,16,1","allows,8,1,27,2","all-weather,4,1,15,2","almost,1,1,8,1,14,1,17,1,21,1,22,1","along,15,4","already,27,1","although,16,1,11,1,15,1,18,1,25,1,39,1,44,1,52,1","altitude,4,1","aluminum,15,1,29,2,37,1","alveolar,48,2,49,2,51,2","always,3,2,32,2,14,2,15,1,17,1,18,2,22,3,25,1,26,3,27,1,38,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","alyson,1,1,21,1","amber,13,2,41,2","ambidextrous,8,1","amendments,41,1,42,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","ames,48,1,49,1,51,1","amine,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,4","amines,39,1","ammonia,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,1","ammonia-like,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","amount,4,1,6,1,7,2,16,1,13,1,15,2,17,1,18,1,19,4,27,1,29,1,39,1,49,1,51,1","amounts,18,1,39,1,40,2,41,1,42,1,43,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","angle,14,3,15,3","angled,14,1","angles,8,1,15,2","animal,39,5","animals,39,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","another,3,1,4,1,16,1,14,1,15,1,26,1,37,1","answered,38,1","anticipated,9,1,30,1,39,1","anton,1,1,21,1","anyone,3,1,11,2,23,1,26,2","anything,16,1,37,1,44,1","anywhere,3,1,9,1,30,1,37,1","apart,37,1","apolo,1,1,21,1","apparatus,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","appearance,49,1,37,1,48,1,51,1,52,1","appearance. ,16,1","appears,14,1","applciation,8,1","applicable,49,4,39,6,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,45,8,46,1,47,1,48,4,51,4,52,6","application,1,1,4,2,6,1,7,1,8,2,9,2,10,1,30,2,32,3,49,1,12,1,13,1,14,1,15,4,18,1,19,1,21,1,24,1,29,1,38,1,51,1,53,1","application. ,16,1","applications,4,5,7,1,8,1,9,2,16,3,30,2,32,2,13,5,15,3,17,1,37,4","applications. ,16,4","applied,15,1,18,1","applied. ,16,1","applies,25,1,29,1,38,1","apply,3,1,16,1,13,1,15,10,18,1,25,3,26,3,37,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","applying,16,2,32,1,18,2","appointment,3,1","appreciable,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","approach,15,1","appropriate,1,1,2,1,4,1,9,1,30,1,32,1,49,2,13,1,15,2,38,2,39,2,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,44,1,45,1,46,1,47,2,48,2,51,2","approval,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","approved,32,1,49,1,38,1,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","approx,9,1,30,1,24,6","approximately,9,1,30,1,41,1","april,44,1,48,1","apron,46,1","aquatic,39,1","aramid,1,5,4,1,8,1,49,5,13,6,20,1,24,1","area,8,1,9,2,30,2,32,1,17,1,18,2,38,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,47,3,53,2","areas,9,1,30,1,49,1,41,1,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","arising,46,1,47,1","aromatic,46,1","around,4,2,7,1,8,1,14,5,15,3,32,1,37,8","arrival,3,1","arrived,4,1","arriving,3,2","artificial,49,1,48,1,51,1","ask,26,1,32,2","asked,15,1,18,3","aspiration,42,1,43,1","assay,49,1,48,1,51,1","assess,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","assigned,49,1,51,1","assist,4,1","assistance,1,1","associated,13,1,52,1","assume,44,1,46,1,47,1","assumes,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,10,1,30,1,49,2,12,1,19,1,21,1,29,1,32,1,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,51,2,52,1","assuming,15,1","assure,44,1","assuring,8,1","asthetics,14,1","asthma,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","ation,3,1","atkinson,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","atmosphere,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,1","attempting,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","attention,49,4,39,1,40,3,41,3,42,4,43,4,44,2,46,2,47,4,48,4,51,4,53,3","aud,1,1","august,48,1","australia,1,1,26,1","austria,26,1","authorize,26,2,38,1","authorized,44,2","autoignition,49,1,46,1,47,2,48,1,51,1","automatically,9,1,26,1","auto-measure,18,1","auto-measuring,9,1,30,1","avail,4,1","available,1,2,4,9,8,1,9,1,30,1,49,12,11,1,15,3,17,1,24,1,29,1,39,1,44,1,46,9,47,12,48,12,51,12","ave,38,1,40,1,45,1","avenue,39,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","avoid,9,1,30,1,49,2,15,1,18,1,39,4,40,1,41,4,42,1,43,1,44,5,45,3,46,3,47,2,48,2,51,2,52,3,53,4","avoided,18,1","aware,3,1,13,2,15,1,18,1","away,16,1,15,1,38,2,41,1,45,1,46,2,47,2","awesome,4,2,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","ax,4,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,10,1,30,1,27,1","b.2,46,1","b.5,47,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2.a,46,1","d.2.b,46,1,47,1","d.o.t,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,3","d001,47,1","daily,26,1","daimeter,15,1","damage,49,1,25,1,32,1,39,1,38,1,40,8,41,4,42,7,43,6,48,1,51,1","damaged,25,1,26,1","damages,44,1,46,1,47,1","damn,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","dan,47,1","danger,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","dangerous,49,1,48,1,51,1","dark,1,1,4,1,9,3,30,9,49,1,29,3","darken,13,1","data,1,1,49,19,20,2,39,9,40,5,41,4,42,5,43,5,44,5,45,5,46,5,47,6,48,19,51,19,52,7,53,4","date,49,1,25,1,27,1,39,2,38,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,44,1,45,2,46,2,47,2,48,1,51,1","dated%2001-2004,50,8","day,1,1,3,1,4,2,7,2,9,1,30,1,26,1,29,1","days,25,4,29,1,38,3,41,1,42,1,53,1","dd,6,4","deal,4,4,6,4,7,4,16,1,11,1,19,4,22,4,29,4","dealer,4,1,6,1,19,1,29,1","deals,1,5,2,1,11,11","death,40,2,41,2,42,2","decide,38,1","decided,15,1","decomposition,49,3,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,45,1,46,1,47,2,48,3,51,3,53,1","decompostion,52,1","defects,49,1,39,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","defined,14,5,26,1","definitely,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","definition,4,1,14,3,44,1","definitions,2,1,14,1","definitions”,16,1","definitive,8,1","defintion,4,1","degradation,49,1,39,1,48,1,51,1","degrade,39,1","degree,14,7,15,3","degrees,4,1,17,1,32,1,38,1","delay,4,1,26,1","deliver,25,1","delivered,25,1,26,1","delivering,8,1","delivery,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,1,26,6,27,1,29,1","demand,49,1,39,2,48,1,51,1","deminimus,39,1","de-minimus,49,1,48,1,51,1","den,24,1","denier,37,1","denmark,26,1","densities,14,1","density,8,1,15,2,24,1,39,2,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,44,1,45,2,46,1,47,1,52,1","department,46,1,47,1","dependant,16,1","dependent,16,2,49,1,51,1","depending,9,1,30,1,26,2,45,1,46,1,47,1","depends,16,1","deposits,25,1","derived,49,1,48,1,51,1","dermal,49,1,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,48,1,51,1","dermatitis,40,1,42,1,43,3","derrick,1,1,21,1","describe,8,1","described,4,1,6,1,7,1,49,2,15,1,18,1,19,1,22,1,29,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,48,2,51,2,52,1","describes,18,1","description,9,1,30,1,14,1,52,1","design,8,1","designated,49,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,51,1","designed,4,1,8,3,16,2","desirable,37,2","desire,37,1","desired,4,2,14,1,15,1,32,1,37,1","desired. ,16,1","destroy,16,1,15,1","destruction,40,1,42,1,43,1","deta,40,2","detailed,2,1,3,1,4,6,9,1,30,1,14,1,24,6,29,1","details,2,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","determination,44,2,52,1","determine,1,1,4,2,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,49,3,10,1,12,1,15,1,19,1,21,1,29,1,32,1,39,2,38,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,1,46,1,47,1,48,2,51,3","determined,45,1","determining,16,1,32,1,38,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","develop,15,1","developed,9,1,30,1","developing,39,2","development,1,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,42,1","develops,8,1","devices,32,1,38,1","dgebpa,39,5","diameter,4,33,7,2,15,6,24,26","diamine,42,2,43,1","dibutyl,46,3","did,49,3,18,1,39,1,48,3,51,3","diethylenetriamine,40,1","difference,8,1,14,2,37,1","differences,14,3","different,1,1,13,1,18,1,26,2","differently,26,1","difficult,8,1,15,2,18,1,25,1,29,1,38,1,40,1","difficulty,49,1,48,1,51,1","digestible,52,1","digit,27,1","diglycidyl,39,2","dike,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,44,1","dilute,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","dilution,45,1","diners,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1","dioxide,39,2,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,1,44,2,45,1,46,1","direct,4,2,9,1,30,1,27,1","directed,46,1","direction,7,2,14,1,15,2","directions,3,1","directly,9,1,30,1,11,1,23,1,26,1,27,2,32,2,38,3","disadvantage,16,2","disadvantages,16,1,14,1","disavanatages,17,1","discard,49,2,48,2,51,2","discarded,49,1,44,1,48,1,51,1","discharge,40,1,44,2","disclaimer,49,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1,52,1","disclaims,46,2,47,2","discomfort,40,1,41,1,45,1,46,1,47,2","discount,25,1,27,1,29,2","discounted,1,4,3,1","discounts,11,1,29,1","discover,4,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,27,1","discuss,16,1,13,1,15,1,25,1","discussed,15,1,18,1","discussion,14,1","disease,41,2,42,1","disorders,39,1,41,2,42,1,46,1","disperse,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1","disposal,49,4,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,2,44,1,45,3,46,4,47,3,48,4,51,4,52,2","dispose,49,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","disposed,44,1","disposer,45,1","dissipated,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","dissolving,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","distance,3,1,49,1,48,1,51,1","distillates,46,1","distributor,3,1,4,2","distributor’s,49,2,48,2,51,2","division,46,3,47,3","dizziness,39,1","dk-h4,29,1,37,2","dna,49,1,48,1,51,1","document,5,4,18,1,34,4,37,4,46,1,47,1","documentation,38,1","documents,1,1,2,1","doing,4,1,6,1,7,1,15,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","dollars,9,1,30,1,12,1,27,1","domestic,46,1,47,1","don,3,1,13,2,14,1,15,1,26,3,37,1","don&rsquo,14,3,32,2,38,3","don’t,15,3","dose,41,1","dot,49,2,39,1,48,2,51,2","down,16,1,15,10","download,18,1","downtown,3,1","dramatic,16,1,37,1","dream,7,1","dried,18,1","dries,4,1,15,3","drink,53,1","dripping,18,1","drum,41,2,44,1","dry,4,1,49,1,15,2,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,1,43,1,44,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1,52,1","drying,15,3,47,1","dryness,45,1","dsl,46,1,47,1","dtex,24,1","dubna,53,1","dudek,1,1,21,1","due,3,1,49,1,11,1,25,2,26,3,39,1,45,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","dupont,29,1","durability,8,1","during,49,3,15,1,26,1,48,3,51,3","dust,49,8,32,4,38,4,45,9,48,7,51,8,53,2","duty,26,1","e.g,49,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","ease,9,1,30,1","easier,9,1,30,1,10,1,14,1,18,1,37,1","easily,4,1,9,2,16,2,30,2,15,4,18,1,32,1","eastern,3,1","easy,4,4,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,14,3,15,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","eat,32,1,38,1,53,1","eaten,15,1","ec50,39,1","ecological,49,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,4,47,4,48,1,51,1,53,1","economical,9,1,30,1","ecotoxicity,46,1,47,1","ecotoxicological,49,1,48,1,51,1","ecotoxicology,39,1","edema,40,1,41,1,42,1","edge,14,1,15,1,32,1","edges,16,1,15,2,29,2,37,2","edges. ,16,1","effect,53,1","effected,53,1","effective,4,1,9,1,16,1,30,1,49,2,15,1,48,2,51,2","effective. ,16,1","effectively,15,2,45,1","effects,49,7,39,9,40,2,41,2,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,4,46,4,47,4,48,7,51,7,53,1","effort,16,1","eglass,24,2","e-glass,1,1,6,1","ehrmann,21,1","ehs,46,1,47,1","either,1,1,4,2,6,1,7,1,8,2,9,1,16,3,30,1,49,2,10,1,12,1,13,1,14,1,18,3,19,1,21,1,25,1,29,1,32,1,39,1,38,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,44,1,45,1,46,2,48,1,51,2","ek,10,1","electrical,4,3,49,2,32,2,38,1,45,1,48,2,51,2","electrically,4,1,32,1","electricity,32,1,38,1,45,1","elements,52,1","eliminates,16,1","elimination,16,1","elongation,24,1","email,3,5,6,1,7,1,11,2,19,1,23,2,26,5,27,3,29,1","emailing,11,1","emails,3,1,11,1","emergency,49,4,39,3,40,4,41,4,42,4,43,4,44,3,45,3,46,2,47,2,48,4,51,4,52,2,53,1","emit,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","emphysema,45,2","employees,32,1,38,1,52,1","empty,44,1","enamel,18,1","enclose,29,2","encourage,4,1,25,1,38,1","encouraged,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,49,1,10,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,26,1,29,1,32,1,38,1,51,1","end,3,1","ends,4,1,16,1,14,2,15,4","energy,43,1","engineering,3,1,9,1,30,1,21,1,45,1,46,1,47,1","england,9,1,30,1","enough,4,1,30,2,13,1,15,2,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2","ensure,46,1,47,1","entail,46,2,47,2","enter,4,1,12,2,19,2","entered,19,1","entering,4,1","entire,1,1,21,1","entry,4,1,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","environment,46,1,47,1,52,1","environmental,49,2,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,3,43,2,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,2,51,2","environments,45,1","epa,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,1","epcra,49,2,48,2,51,2","epichlorohydrin,39,2,40,1","epoxied,4,1,15,1","epoxies,4,1,9,2,30,2,13,6,18,4","epoxy,1,18,2,2,4,6,8,6,9,25,16,2,30,27,13,16,15,21,17,6,18,27,20,4,26,1,29,6,32,1,39,8,38,6,40,6,41,2,42,2,43,2","epoxy.html,30,4","epoxy0308.html,9,4","epoxyresinchoice.html,13,4","equip,10,4","equipment,1,5,2,1,8,1,49,1,10,1,32,2,39,2,38,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,4,45,1,48,1,51,1","equivalent,9,1,30,1,49,1,48,1,51,1","ergonomic,8,1","esp,1,1","especially,9,1,30,1,29,1,46,1,47,1","est,3,4,49,1,24,24,51,1,52,1","established,16,1,49,7,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,48,7,51,7","estimated,4,2","et,38,1","ether,39,6,44,1,46,4","ethyl,47,3","ethylene,39,4","eur,1,1","euro,1,1","evaluation,49,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,48,1,51,1","evaporation,44,1,46,1,47,1,52,1","even,16,2,13,1,14,2,15,1,18,1,37,1,40,1,44,1","event,44,1","eventually,13,1","everything,9,1","evidence,39,4,45,2","ex,1,1,4,1,9,1,16,1,11,1,14,1,15,8,17,1,23,1,29,3,32,1,38,1","example,13,1,14,3,18,1,24,1","examples,4,2","exceed,26,1,32,1,38,1,47,1","exceeded,45,1","excelant,37,1","excellence,1,1","excellent,1,2,4,5,6,4,7,2,9,1,30,1,15,1,19,4,22,4,29,5,37,1","except,4,1,49,1,32,1,39,1,38,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,51,1","exception,13,1","exceptional,1,1,16,1","exceptions,14,1,23,1,47,1","excess,4,1,16,1,15,1,39,1","excessive,18,6,39,1,40,2,41,1,44,1,45,1,52,1","exchanges,49,1,48,1,51,1","excluding,25,1,38,1","exempt,46,2,47,2","exercise,45,1","exercised,49,1,48,1,51,1","exhaust,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,47,2","exist,23,1,29,1,44,1,52,1","existing,16,2,27,1,40,2,43,1,46,1,47,1","exists,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,52,1","exit,3,1","exothermic,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","exp,27,1","expand,4,1,7,1,24,1,41,1","expanded,7,1","expanding,15,1","expectations,15,1,26,1","expected,4,1,6,1,7,1,49,12,19,1,22,1,29,2,39,1,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,45,2,48,13,51,13","expense,15,1","expense. ,16,1","expensive,4,1,9,1,16,1,30,1,13,1,37,3","experience,3,1","expert,1,1,4,1","explain,14,1,18,1","explaining,3,1","explains,14,1,15,1","explanations,37,1","explosion,49,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,46,1,47,2,48,2,51,2","explosive,44,1,46,2,47,2,53,1","export,26,3,38,2,46,1,47,1","exporting,26,3,38,3","expose,49,1,48,1,51,1","exposed,9,2,30,2,49,3,13,2,18,3,39,3,44,1,46,2,47,2,48,3,51,3","exposure,9,1,30,1,49,22,32,1,39,10,38,1,40,6,41,7,42,8,43,8,44,1,45,8,46,5,47,7,48,22,51,22,52,2","exposures,40,3,41,2,42,2","express,26,1,38,1,44,1,46,1,47,1","expressed,49,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,51,1","extension,47,1","extensive,3,1,18,1","exterior,8,1,15,1","external,41,1","extinguishers,44,1","extinguishing,49,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,51,1","extra,8,1,9,5,30,5,26,1,43,5","extreme,13,1,18,1,39,1,47,2","extremely,15,1,29,1,37,1","eye,49,4,39,3,40,5,41,9,42,7,43,7,44,2,45,3,46,5,47,4,48,4,51,4,53,3","eyelids,47,1","eyes,49,3,32,1,39,1,38,1,40,4,41,1,42,2,43,2,44,3,45,1,46,4,47,5,48,3,51,3,52,1,53,2","fab,21,1","fabric,1,21,2,1,4,5,6,4,7,5,8,2,16,25,12,8,13,1,14,19,15,1,18,1,19,4,20,1,29,22,32,2,37,37,51,1,53,1","fabric. ,16,3","fabric.html,37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1,32,1,38,1,53,1","needs,9,1,16,2","negative,39,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","negligence,26,1","negligible,44,1,52,1","neither,52,1","neon,4,2","neoprene,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","nervous,47,5","netherlands,26,1","never,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,11,1,13,2,14,1,18,1,19,1,22,1,23,2,29,2,32,1,38,1,44,2","nevertheless,18,1,25,1,38,1","new,1,4,3,3,4,2,9,2,30,2,22,1,26,1,46,1","newly,16,1","next,4,2,9,1,13,1,15,3,16,1,29,1","nh,1,1,3,3,27,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","nice,4,1,6,2,7,2,15,4,19,2,22,2,29,2","niosh,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","nitrile,1,16,9,1,30,1,10,1,32,1,38,1","nitrilebutyl,39,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","nitrile-butyl,40,1","nitrogen,40,1,41,1,42,2,43,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","nj,39,1,40,2,41,2,46,1","n-octanol,46,1,47,1","nok,1,1","nominal,15,2","non,46,1,47,1,53,1,52,1","non-combustible,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","non-domestic,46,1","none,4,3,11,1,39,1,40,1,42,1,43,2,44,1,45,1,46,14,47,14,48,4,49,4,53,1,51,4,52,2","non-fibrous,48,1,49,1,51,1","non-flammable,15,2,39,1","non-metalic,4,1","non-natural,4,1,32,1","non-toxic,9,1,30,1","non-transportation,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","noodle,15,1","normal,18,1,39,1,46,1,48,3,49,3,53,1,51,3,52,5","normally,25,1,32,1","north,3,1,44,1","northfield,3,1","norway,1,1,26,1","nos,47,1","nose,40,2,46,1,47,1","notation,14,1","notch,4,2,6,1,19,1,29,1","note,3,2,4,5,8,1,9,3,30,2,10,1,13,2,14,2,15,6,16,2,19,1,24,1,25,1,26,4,29,3,32,1,37,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","noted,42,1,43,1","notes,4,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","nothing,8,1,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","notice,7,2,15,1","notification,46,1,47,1","nozzles,48,1,49,1,51,1","ntp,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,53,1,51,1","nuclear,32,1,38,1","nuisance,45,4,48,4,49,4,51,4","number,4,2,7,9,12,2,14,6,15,2,16,3,25,1,27,1,29,13,39,3,40,2,41,3,42,3,43,2,44,1,45,3,46,4,47,4,48,1,49,1,51,1","numbers,16,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,52,1","ny,12,1","nylon,16,1","nzd,1,1","obispo,21,1","object,4,3,32,1","objects,10,1,15,1,17,1,37,3","observed,48,2,49,2,51,2","obtain,29,1,47,1","obtained,46,1,47,1","obvious,23,1","obviously,23,1","occasional,11,1","occasionally,11,1,18,1,44,1","occupational,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","occur,3,1,39,3,40,4,41,4,42,4,43,4,44,1,45,2,46,2,47,3,48,11,49,11,53,2,51,11,52,1","occurrence,48,1,49,1,51,1","occurs,39,1","octane,46,3","odor,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","odorless,45,2,52,1","off,6,1,8,1,9,2,15,7,46,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","offer,25,2,27,3,38,2","offered,11,1","offers,27,1","office,3,1","off-the-shelf,15,1","off-white,9,3,30,3,49,1","ohno,1,1,21,1","oil,15,1","ointments,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","old,3,1","older,13,1","once,15,4,18,1,25,1,26,1,29,3","one,4,2,6,1,7,4,9,2,30,3,11,1,12,1,13,3,14,1,15,7,16,9,18,1,19,1,22,1,29,2,37,3,39,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","ones,15,1","online,1,5,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,26,1,27,2","on-line,2,1,6,2,27,1,29,1","only-this,8,1","on-site,3,1","ontact,12,1","onto,3,1,15,1,16,1,29,1","open,6,1,40,1","opened,10,1","operating,52,2","operation,52,1","operations,39,1","oprder,12,1","option,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,14,1,15,2,16,2,17,1,27,9","options,1,5,2,2,3,2,15,1,25,1,27,1","oral,39,3,40,2,41,3,42,2,43,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","orally,39,1","orange,1,2,4,4,12,2,29,1,37,1","order,3,2,4,5,6,1,7,3,12,1,16,3,17,1,19,1,22,1,23,3,25,1,26,1,27,2,29,3,32,1","ordered,6,1,25,3","ordering,4,2,6,1,25,1,29,1","orders,1,1,3,2,26,2,27,3,32,1","organ,40,2,42,2,43,1,46,1,47,1","organic,32,1,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,1,43,1,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","organisms,39,1","organization,11,1","organs,46,2,47,1","orientation,15,3","original,15,1,39,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,47,1","originally,47,1","orm-d,47,1","osha,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,44,3,45,3,46,2,47,2,48,5,49,5,53,1,51,5","other. ,16,1","otherwise,25,1,26,4,27,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,4,49,4,51,4","ounce,9,1,30,1","ourselves,9,2,30,2","outdoor,18,1","outer,16,2,52,1","outide,4,1","outlets,32,1,38,1","outlined,15,1","outside,3,3,15,3,26,3,38,2","ovary,48,1,49,1,51,1","over10,25,1","over-charges,7,1","overexposure,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,53,1","overexposures,41,1","overhead,9,1,30,1","overheated,52,1","overheating,52,1","overlay,16,12,37,1","overloading,45,1","overpayment,6,1","overshipping,22,1","over-shipping,6,1,19,1,29,1","overview,16,1,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","overworking,18,1","owe,8,1","own,15,2","owner,3,1,15,1","owners,32,1,38,1","ownership,25,1,26,1","oxidants,43,1","oxide,39,1,40,1,41,1","oxides,40,1,41,1,42,1,46,1,47,2,48,2,49,2,51,2","oxidizers,42,1","oxidizes,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","oxidizing,40,1,41,1,44,1,45,2,46,2,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","oxygen,39,2,48,2,49,2,51,2","oz,4,1,7,1,9,2,30,2,24,6,29,1","ozs,1,1","p.o,38,1","p.o.box,53,1","pa,39,1,40,2,41,2","pack,8,1","package,25,6,26,5","packaged,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,2,29,2,47,1","packages,25,2,26,5","packaging,1,1,4,1,6,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","packed,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","packing,1,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,3,47,3","padding,29,2","paddle,15,1","paddles,1,4","page,1,2,2,3,3,2,4,2,5,3,6,2,7,5,8,5,9,1,30,1,10,5,11,1,12,5,13,2,14,2,15,2,17,2,18,2,19,1,20,1,21,1,22,1,23,2,24,3,25,1,26,5,27,1,29,1,32,1,34,3,37,1,38,2,39,5,40,4,41,5,42,5,43,4,45,4","pages,8,1","paid,4,1,26,1","pain,41,3,42,2,43,1","paint,9,1,30,1","painters,15,2","painting,13,1","pair,10,2","pale,39,1","pallets,26,1","pancreas,40,1,41,1,42,1","paper,4,1,8,1,14,1,15,5,16,2,18,2,29,2","papers,3,1","parcel,26,1","park,3,1","part,15,5,18,1,25,1,29,1,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,1","particles,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","particular,16,1,37,1,44,1,46,2,47,2","particularly,9,1,30,1,32,1","particulates,48,4,49,4,51,4","partition,46,1,47,1","partitioning,39,1","partner,32,1,38,1","partners,52,1","parts,8,1,18,1,32,1,38,1","pas,48,1","pass,16,1,23,1","passed,26,1","patching,8,1","patent,1,2,4,1,32,1","patents,44,1","patterson,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","pay,9,1,30,1,12,1,27,1","payable,27,1","paying,3,1","payment,1,4,2,3,3,3,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,19,1,27,9,29,1,38,1","payment1.html,27,4","payments,27,2","paypal,8,2,9,2,30,2,10,2,27,4","peanut,18,1","peel-ply,16,3,18,1","peel-ply. ,16,1","peg,16,1","pel,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,2","pending,1,2,4,1,32,1","penetration,9,1,30,1","people,15,1,18,3,27,1","per,4,5,6,1,14,4,16,1,17,1,37,2,44,1,45,1","percent,44,1","perfect,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,9,1,30,1,16,3,19,1,22,1,29,1","perfectly,4,3,6,1,7,1,13,2,15,3,16,2,19,1,22,1,29,4","performance,8,1","performed,48,2,49,2,51,2","periodically,11,1","periods,39,1","permanantly,32,2","permanent,16,1,40,1,42,1,43,1","permissible,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","permission,26,2,38,1","permit,3,1,44,1","permits,8,1","peroxides,44,1","perpendicular,14,2","persist,42,1,43,1","persistent,40,1,42,1,43,2","persists,45,2,46,2,47,1,53,3","person,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,53,2","personal,1,1,23,1,27,1,39,3,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,1,46,2,47,3,48,2,49,2,53,1,51,2","personnel,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","persons,46,2,47,2","petersburg,44,1","petroleum,46,1,47,6","pg,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","ph,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1","phagocytosis,48,1,49,1,51,1","phenol,41,3,42,3","phenolic,40,1,41,1,42,1","phenyl,39,1","phone,3,3,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,19,1,25,1,27,1,29,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,52,1","photo,6,4","photos,21,1","phynolic,4,1","physical,9,1,30,1,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,44,1,45,3,46,4,47,4,48,2,49,2,53,2,51,2,52,1","physician,39,2,40,1,41,1,46,1,52,1","pic,14,2,29,1,37,1","pick,3,1","pickup,26,1","pick-up,3,1,26,1","pickups,3,1","pick-ups,3,1","pics,14,1","pics&rdquo,14,1","picture,14,1","pictures,29,1","piece,13,2,15,4,16,10,18,2,29,3","piece. ,16,1","pieces,12,1,15,3,16,4,29,1","pieces. ,16,4","pigment,9,3,30,3,44,4","pigment.htm,44,4","pigments,44,1","pink,1,1,4,3,12,1,21,1","pint,46,6","pipes,15,2","piping,15,1","pivot,8,1","pivots,14,1","place,3,1,16,1,32,1,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,2,44,2,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","plain,1,8,14,8,16,3,29,5,37,10","plan,13,2,37,1","plastic,15,10,16,6,18,1,29,2","play,5,2,34,2","player,5,2,34,2","playing,5,1,34,1","pleasenomoredeals,11,1","plenty,46,2,47,2","plexi-glass,16,2","pliers,15,1","plugs,32,1,38,1","plus,1,1,7,1,21,1,39,1","pm,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","pmcc,41,1,42,1","po,26,1,27,1","point,4,1,15,2,39,4,40,4,41,4,42,4,43,4,44,1,45,4,46,3,47,3,48,2,49,2,51,2,52,3","poison,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","poland,26,1","pole,15,2,21,1","policy,1,2,2,2,23,1,25,3,26,2,32,1,38,1","pollutant,46,1","polyamine,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","polyamines,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","polycycloaliphatic,43,1","polyester,4,1,9,3,30,3,13,5,16,2,29,6,32,1","polyether,48,1","polyethylenepolyamine,41,1","polymer,40,1,52,1","polymerization,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","polyoxypropylenediamine,40,2,42,2,43,2","polytechnic,21,1","polyurathane,8,1","poor,13,1","poorly,13,1,41,1","popular,37,1","pop-up,6,1","porter,21,1","portugal,1,1,26,1","pos,1,1,27,2","posing,48,1,49,1,51,1","positive,39,1","possibility,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","possible,4,1,9,1,30,1,11,1,12,1,13,1,14,1,15,2,16,1,17,1,26,2,39,3,40,1,41,7,42,3,43,2,45,4,47,1","possibly,15,1,16,2,42,1,46,1,47,1","post,26,1","postal,26,3","pot,9,2,30,2,18,1","potential,16,1,25,1,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,2,48,2,49,2,51,2","potentially,32,1,38,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","pound,16,1,39,1","pounds,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","powder,8,2,20,1,45,10","power,8,1","powered,21,1","pp,22,1","ppm,39,1,46,1,47,11","practice,39,1,45,1","practices,48,1,49,1,51,1","precautionary,39,1","precautions,15,1,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,1,49,1,53,2,51,1,52,2","precise,7,1","pre-existing,39,3,47,1","pre-exiting,15,1","prefer,26,1","preferred,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","pre-filters,10,1","pregnant,39,3","pre-impregnated,17,1","prematurely,9,1,30,1","premium,9,2,30,2","prepared,15,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","preparing,15,2","prepreg,1,1,17,2","pre-pregging,17,1","prepregs,17,6","prepregs.html,17,4","presence,48,1,49,1,51,1","present,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,2,48,7,49,7,51,7,52,1","presented,48,1,49,1,51,1","president,21,1","pressing,16,1","pressure,16,5,39,2,40,2,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,2,47,3,48,2,49,2,51,2","pressurized,47,1","prevent,9,1,30,1,39,2,44,1,45,1,46,2,47,3,48,1,49,1,51,1","preventing,48,1,49,1,51,1","previous,46,1,47,2,48,1","price,1,1,4,3,6,3,7,3,8,1,9,2,30,2,10,1,12,1,19,3,21,1,22,2,25,1,29,4,32,1,38,2,49,1,51,1","prices,1,1,12,2","pricing,4,4,5,1,9,3,30,3,24,1,29,3,34,1","primarily,9,2,30,2,13,1,32,1","primary,13,1,17,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","principles,8,1","prior,3,2,16,2,44,1","priority,1,1,23,1,26,1","privacy,1,1,2,1,11,1,23,2","privacy.html,23,4","private,27,1","probable,39,1","probably,15,1,26,1","problem,8,1,18,1","problems,15,1,18,5,48,1,49,1,51,1","procedure,32,1,44,1","procedures,32,2,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,44,1,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,53,2,51,2,52,1","process,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,30,1,10,1,15,2,19,1,27,1,29,1,32,1","processed,4,1","processes,1,2,3,1,16,1","processing,48,3,49,3,51,3,52,1","produce,8,1,15,1,39,3,40,2,41,1,42,1,43,2,44,1","produced,15,1,39,1","producing,16,2","product,1,6,2,1,4,8,6,10,7,8,8,3,9,9,30,9,10,3,12,3,16,3,18,2,19,9,21,4,22,6,25,5,26,2,29,9,32,5,38,7,39,19,40,9,41,10,42,10,43,13,44,3,45,4,46,10,47,13,48,25,49,28,53,2,51,28,52,7","product. ,16,4","production,16,1,46,1,47,1","production. ,16,1","products,1,11,2,3,3,2,4,4,5,1,6,2,7,2,8,2,9,8,30,8,10,2,12,4,13,1,16,7,18,2,19,2,21,2,22,1,23,2,25,4,26,6,29,3,32,16,34,1,37,3,38,14,39,1,40,2,41,3,42,3,43,1,44,1,45,1,46,7,47,7,48,1,49,3,53,4,51,3,52,1","products&amp,38,1","professional,4,3,8,1,15,3,16,1,18,1","professionally,29,1","profit,3,1","profits,46,1,47,1","program,39,1","progress,25,1","prohibited,26,1,32,1,38,2","project,30,2","projects,8,1","prolonged,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,2,43,2,44,2,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","promised,4,1,6,1,19,1,29,1","prompt,1,1,4,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","proof,13,1","proper,1,1,4,2,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,2,30,2,10,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,29,1,32,2,38,2,39,2,40,5,41,3,42,5,43,4,46,3,47,3,49,1,51,1","properly,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","properties,9,1,30,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","property,46,1,47,1","proposition,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","propriatary,3,1","proprietary,46,1,47,1","propylene,40,1,41,1","prosthetic,21,1","protect,29,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,53,1","protected,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","protecting,13,1","protection,4,1,13,1,18,1,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,44,2,45,3,46,6,47,7,48,4,49,4,53,3,51,4","protective,9,1,30,1,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,44,3,45,1,46,1,47,3,48,6,49,6,53,1,51,6,52,2","provide,3,1,4,1,8,2,12,1,15,2,16,3,18,1,23,2,25,1,26,1,38,1,40,1,42,1,43,1,44,1","provided,25,1,46,2,47,3","provides,9,1,30,1,15,2,16,1","providing,1,1,3,2","psi,8,2","pst,48,1","pt,9,4,30,4","pte,1,1","public,4,1","publish,23,2","published,3,1,4,1","pull,15,6","pulled,16,1","pulling,15,4,32,1","pulmonary,45,1,48,3,49,3,51,3","pump,9,5,30,5,18,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","pumping,44,1","pumps,9,2,30,2","puncture,47,1","punctures,10,1","purchase,1,2,4,8,6,3,7,2,8,2,9,1,30,1,10,3,11,1,12,2,13,1,15,1,19,2,21,2,25,2,29,2,32,2,38,4,49,2,51,2","purchased,25,1,32,1,38,3,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1","purchases,11,1,26,1,29,1","purchasing,13,1","purifying,40,1,42,1,43,1","purple,1,1,4,3,12,2","purpose,16,1,18,1,32,1,38,1,44,1,46,2,47,2","purposes,7,1,16,1","push,15,5","putties,9,1,30,1","pvc,15,3","pyrofil,48,1","qt,8,1,9,4,30,3","qty,9,17,30,19","quailty,1,1","qualities,9,1,30,1","quality,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,3,10,1,19,1,22,1,29,1","quantities,9,1,30,1,25,2,39,1,44,1","quantity,9,1,46,1,47,1","quart,9,1","question,3,1,38,1","questions,1,2,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,3,9,2,30,2,10,3,12,1,15,1,19,2,20,1,21,1,23,1,27,1,29,1,32,2,38,2","quick,4,1,6,1,7,1,19,1,22,2,29,1,34,1","quickly,4,1,15,1,16,1,18,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","quicktime,5,1,34,1","quiet,44,1","quite,13,1,15,4,16,1,37,1","quote,4,1","rabbits,39,3","ramdom,14,1","range,9,1,30,1,44,1,46,2,47,2","rapid,40,1,41,2,42,1","rapidly,40,1,52,1","rare,3,1,52,1","rarely,15,2,25,1,29,1,38,1","rash,41,1,47,1","rashes,39,1","rat,48,1,49,1,51,1","rate,9,1,30,1,44,1,46,1,47,1,52,1","rates,18,1","rating,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2","ratio,9,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","ratios,9,1,18,1","rats,39,2,48,3,49,3,51,3","raw,1,1,20,1","rcomposites.com,3,1","rcra,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,45,1,48,3,49,3,51,3","rd,3,1,27,1,52,1","re,4,2,6,1,7,1,29,1,19,1,22,1","reach,15,1","react,40,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","reaction,15,1,40,3,41,6,42,5,43,4","reactions,39,1,40,1,41,1","reactivity,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,44,1,45,2,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,53,1,51,2,52,1","read,9,1,30,1,13,1,15,1,18,2,38,1,44,1","readily,48,1,49,1,51,1","ready,16,1,47,2","really,1,1,4,1,6,1,29,1,19,1,22,1","rear,3,2","reason,13,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","reasonable,4,1,6,1,7,1,29,1,19,1,22,1,23,1","reasonably,9,1,30,1","reasons,3,1","reauthorization,41,1,42,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","receive,3,3,11,2,12,1,23,1,26,2,27,1,38,2,44,1","received,4,1,6,1,7,1,29,1,19,1,22,1,25,3,38,4","receives,26,1","receiving,3,1","recent,39,1","recently,4,1","reclaim,39,1,40,1","recommend,4,1,15,2","recommendation,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","recommendations,13,1,18,1,38,1","recommended,4,1,8,1,9,4,30,4,16,2,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,2,47,2","record,32,2","recording,32,1","recordkeeping,48,1,49,1,51,1","recover,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2","recovery,27,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,2","recyclable,52,1","recycle,39,1,40,1,44,1","red,1,2,4,3,29,7,30,2,12,4,45,1","red&amp,24,1","reddish-brown,9,1,30,1","redness,39,2,41,2,42,1,43,1,44,1","refer,32,1,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","refered,14,2","referenced,46,1,47,1","referred,9,1,29,2,14,5,16,1,18,1","refers,14,3,44,1","refresh,6,1","refrigerated,17,1","refund,1,2,2,1,4,1,6,3,7,2,8,2,9,2,29,2,30,2,10,2,12,1,19,2,21,1,22,1,25,6,26,1,32,2,38,3,49,1,51,1","refund.html,25,4","refundable,25,3","refunded,25,3,38,1","regarding,3,1,14,1,15,2,16,1,23,1,26,1,32,1,38,1","region,46,1,47,1,53,1","registry,48,1,49,1,51,1","regulated,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,2,48,4,49,4,51,4","regulation,26,1,38,1,44,1,52,1","regulations,26,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,4,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","regulatory,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,45,3,46,4,47,6,48,2,49,2,51,2","reinforcement,7,1","reinforcing,7,2","related,1,3,2,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,5,29,1,30,5,10,1,11,1,12,1,13,1,18,1,19,1,20,1,21,1,25,3,32,1,38,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,2,49,3,51,3","relaxed,7,2","relay,1,1,21,1","release,8,10,15,2,16,7,18,1,20,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,2,47,3,48,3,49,3,53,1,51,3","released,52,1","releases,46,6,47,6","releasewax,8,1","relevance,39,1","relevant,46,1,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","reliable,46,1,47,1","reliance,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","remaining,15,1","remains,15,1","remove,4,1,14,1,15,3,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,2,43,2,44,1,45,2,46,3,47,3,48,3,49,3,53,1,51,3","removed,11,1,15,1,39,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","removing,15,3,39,1","repacking,25,1","repairs,8,1","repeat,15,1","repeated,8,1,39,3,40,2,41,1,42,3,43,3,44,2,45,2,46,1,47,1","replaced,48,1,49,1,51,1","replacement,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,29,1,30,1,10,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,49,1,51,1","reported,39,2","reporting,41,1,42,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","reposition,15,1","representations,44,1","representatives,26,1","reproduction,39,1","reproductive,39,2,45,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","republic,26,1","request,3,1,12,2,23,1,26,3","requested,26,6,32,1","requests,12,1,25,1,38,1","require,9,1,30,1,26,1,37,3","required,3,1,23,1,44,1,53,1","requirement,13,1,32,1","requirements,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,3,45,1,48,3,49,3,51,3","requirements. ,16,1","requires,16,3","resalable,25,2","resale,26,2,38,1","research,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,29,1,30,1,10,1,12,1,13,1,15,1,18,2,19,1,21,1,32,2,38,1,39,2,45,1,49,1,51,1","resell,25,1,38,2","resembles,16,1","reserve,23,1","reserved,13,1,14,1,15,2,16,1,17,1,18,1","reshipping,25,1","re-shipping,25,1","residence,27,1","residential,26,1","residual,39,1","residue,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","resilience,37,2","resin,1,1,2,1,4,1,9,18,29,3,30,14,13,6,15,2,16,8,17,4,18,5,20,1,32,1,37,1,39,14,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3,46,4,47,1,48,1","resins,4,12,8,1,9,4,29,6,30,4,13,14,17,1,18,2,32,2,38,1","resistance,8,1,9,1,30,1","resistant,10,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,46,1","resolutions,18,1","resolve,15,1,18,2,25,1","resolving,1,1,2,1,9,1,30,1,18,1","resources,15,1","respect,44,1","respectfully,12,1","respirable,48,8,49,9,51,9","respiration,48,1,49,1,51,1","respirator,1,8,9,1,30,1,10,1,32,1,38,1,39,1,40,2,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,53,1","respirators,1,4","respiratory,32,1,38,1,39,3,40,5,41,6,42,5,43,5,44,1,45,4,46,2,47,4,48,5,49,5,53,2,51,5","respond,3,1","response,3,1,39,2,44,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","responsibility,1,2,4,2,6,2,7,2,8,2,9,2,29,2,30,2,10,2,12,2,19,2,21,2,26,2,32,3,38,3,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,1,44,2,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,2,49,4,51,4,52,1","responsible,25,2,26,1,27,1,32,1,38,1","resposibilty,25,1","restocking,25,4,38,1","restricted,26,1,38,1","restriction,3,1,26,1","restrictions,26,1","result,32,1,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,2,46,1,47,1,48,4,49,4,51,4","resulting,9,1,30,1,40,1,43,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","results,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,29,1,30,1,10,1,12,1,15,3,16,3,19,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,44,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,2,51,2","retailer,3,1","retaining,9,1,30,1","retarded,52,1","return,1,1,2,1,3,3,25,6,38,3","returnable,25,1","returned,25,6,38,1","returning,3,1","returns,10,1,25,3,32,1,38,3","reuse,39,1,44,1,46,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","reutter,1,1,21,1","revealed,48,1,49,1,51,1","reverse,16,1","review,39,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","revised,39,6,40,5,41,6,42,6,43,5,45,5","revision,46,1,47,1","ridged,15,1","right,1,1,3,2,4,1,29,1,15,2,16,1,23,1,24,1,37,3","rights,13,1,14,1,15,1,16,1,17,1,18,1","rinse,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","risk,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","robert,21,1","rockets,4,1","rocks,22,1","rocky,46,1,47,2","rodmaker,4,1","rods,15,1","roll,8,1,29,7,15,2","roller,8,4,18,1","rolling,15,1","rolls,29,3,17,1,25,1","romania,26,1","room,8,1,39,1","rough,15,1","round,4,2,15,2,37,1","rounded,32,1,37,2","route,25,1,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","routes,25,1,46,1,47,1","roving,1,2,6,5,53,1","rt-11,3,2","rt-132,3,3","rt-3a,3,2","rub,53,1","rubber,8,1,15,2,16,2,39,3,40,3,41,3,42,3,43,3","run,8,1,11,2,14,2,18,1","running,53,2","runoff,9,1,30,1","runs,14,1,15,1","rupture,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1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","study,48,1,49,1,51,1","stuff,4,1,6,2,7,2,29,2,19,2,22,2","stunningly,29,1","subchronic,48,3,49,3,51,3","subject,14,1,27,1,41,1,42,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","subjected,9,1,30,1","subjecting,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","sublimes,45,1","subsequent,39,1","substance,48,2,49,2,51,2","substances,15,1,39,1,45,1,46,3,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","subtract,27,1","successfully,25,1,32,1","suck,16,1","sucked,16,2","suction,16,2","sufficient,39,1,44,1,45,1,47,2","suggestions,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,2,29,1,30,2,10,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,49,1,51,1","suit,46,1,47,1","suitability,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,9,1,29,1,30,1,10,1,12,1,19,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,44,1,46,1,47,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","suitable,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,1,46,1,47,1","suited,3,1,9,1,30,1","suits,10,2","sun,18,2","sunlight,9,2,30,2","sun-tan,18,1","super,4,1,6,2,7,5,29,2,19,2,22,2,37,2","superb,1,1,6,1,7,1,29,1,19,1,22,1","superfund,41,1,42,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","supersedes,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","supplied,44,1","supplier,44,1","suppliers,4,1,52,1","supplies,29,1,16,1","sure,6,1,9,1,15,2,30,1,13,1,18,1,53,1","surf,30,2","surface,9,1,15,3,30,1,16,2,18,2,26,1,46,1,47,1,53,3","surfaces,8,1,9,1,30,1","surpassed,1,1","surprisingly,15,1","surrounding,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","susceptible,39,1,40,1,41,1","suspected,53,1","sustained,4,1","swallow,53,1","swallowed,40,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","sweden,26,1","sweep,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","sweet,22,1","swelling,43,1","switch,18,1","switzerland,1,1,26,1","symptoms,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,3,43,3,45,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","synthesis,48,1,49,1,51,1","synthetic,8,1","system,1,16,8,2,9,7,30,7,13,3,18,1,23,1,26,1,32,1,38,1,39,2,40,9,41,1,42,1,43,6,45,13,46,1,47,6,48,1,49,1,51,1","system’s,13,1","system®,39,6,40,5,41,6,42,6,45,5","systems,9,5,30,5,18,1,38,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","t300,29,4,37,1","t300-1k42-pw,29,1","t300-4hs,29,1","t300-pw,29,1","t300-tx,29,2","t650,29,1","t650-5hs,29,1","t7,7,1","t700,7,3","t700-tx,29,2","table,16,3,32,1","tag,39,1","tailored,17,1","take,3,1,5,1,26,2,34,1,41,1,44,1","taken,9,1,30,1,39,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","takes,4,1,18,1,25,1,26,1","tan,9,2,30,2","tape,1,24,7,7,8,1,15,8,12,1,16,3","tape. ,16,2","tapes,1,2,2,1,15,1","target,46,3,47,2","tax,1,2","tcc,44,1","te,8,1","team,1,2,21,2","teams,1,1,21,1","tearing,44,1","technical,1,1,2,1,3,2,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,2,45,1","technique,8,1,15,3,16,5","techniques,1,1,3,1,8,3,15,7,16,5","techniques. ,16,1","teflon,8,1","teir1,4,8","tel,53,2","telepathic,22,1","telephone,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,2,49,1,51,1,52,1","temp,4,2,8,2,9,1,15,2,30,1","temperature,4,1,8,2,9,1,30,1,13,1,17,1,18,1,24,1,39,1,40,2,41,3,42,2,43,2,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","temperatures,9,1,15,1,30,1,18,1,32,1,38,1,39,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","tempered,8,1","temporary,45,1","temps,4,3","tenacity,24,1","tendency,13,1","tensile,4,2,7,1","tension,8,1","tepa,40,1,41,1,43,2","teratogenicity,48,1,49,1,51,1","teratology,39,1","term,32,1,38,1,40,1,41,2,42,1,43,1,53,1","terms,1,1,4,1,6,1,7,1,8,1,29,1,10,1,12,1,16,1,19,1,20,1,21,1,32,1,38,1,49,1,51,1","test,48,3,49,3,51,3","tested,32,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","testing,18,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","tests,9,1,30,1,39,1,48,3,49,3,51,3","teta,40,2,41,3","tetraethylenepentamine,40,2,41,2,43,1","tetraethylenetriamine,40,1,41,1","texalium,1,4,29,8,12,5,37,2","texelium,12,1","th,48,1","thank,3,1,4,2,5,1,6,1,7,1,29,1,10,1,12,1,19,1,26,1,32,1,34,1,38,1","thanks,4,4,6,4,7,3,29,4,19,4,22,4","that. ,16,1","thats,22,1","theft,26,1","themselves,44,1","themselves. ,16,1","theoretical,39,1","thereby,16,1","therefore,3,1,4,2,29,1,14,1,16,4,25,1,32,1","thereof,25,1","theres,22,1","thermal,4,1,44,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,2","thermo,8,1","thick,15,1,18,2,37,4","thicken,15,1","thickened,9,1,30,1","thickening,9,4,30,4","thicker,16,2","thickest,16,1","thickly,18,1","thickness,7,7,16,1,18,1,24,12","thickness. ,16,1","thin,4,1,15,3,14,1,18,1","thing,22,1","think,15,1","thinly,18,1","thinner,16,2","third,13,1","thivkness,15,1","thoroughly,32,1,38,1,39,2,40,1,41,2,42,1,43,1,44,1,48,1,49,1,53,1,51,1","those,16,1,25,1,26,1,32,1,38,1","though,14,1","thought,22,2","thousand,14,1","thread,1,1,6,5","threads,29,3","three,13,3,16,1,39,1","threshold,17,1,32,1,38,1,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","throat,32,1,38,1,40,3,41,1,42,2,43,2,46,1,47,1","through,15,3,29,1,16,4,26,1,37,1,40,3,41,1,42,2,45,1","throughout,29,1,16,1","tied,15,1","tier,4,5","tight,15,3,14,1,37,2","tighter,15,1,29,1,14,1,16,1","tightest,14,1,16,1,37,1","tightly,39,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","tightness,42,1,45,1","tilton,3,1","time,3,2,9,1,30,1,11,1,13,2,14,1,16,1,18,2,22,1,32,1,34,1,39,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","time…,15,1","timely,4,1,6,1,7,1,29,1,19,1,22,1","times,9,1,15,1,30,1,13,1,26,1","tinsile,24,1","tinsility,24,1","tint,13,1","tiny,4,1,7,4,15,1,29,3,14,1","tip,15,1","tips,1,2,21,2","tire,44,1","tissue,40,1,41,2,42,2,43,3","title,39,2,40,2,41,3,42,3,43,2,45,2,48,2,49,2,51,2","tlv,46,1,47,1","today,13,1","tofa,43,1","together,7,1,15,1,14,1,16,2,18,1,39,1,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2","toluene,46,1","tomassi,21,1","too,4,2,6,1,7,2,15,4,29,1,18,8,19,1,22,1","tool,4,2,24,1,32,1","tools,1,1,2,1,8,4","tools.html,8,4","top,4,4,6,1,15,3,29,1,16,4,19,1,24,1,37,1","topics,15,3","top-of-the-line,18,1","torch,44,1","total,4,3,9,2,30,2,39,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","totally,18,1","touching,16,1","tougher,9,1,30,1","tours,3,1","tow,1,2,6,5","toward,3,1","toxic,4,1,39,2,40,7,41,6,42,6,43,6,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","toxicity,39,2,40,1,41,2,42,1,43,1,48,5,49,5,51,5,52,1","toxicological,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1,46,2,47,2,48,4,49,4,53,1,51,4","toxicology,39,3,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","toxin,42,1","tp,4,1","tr40,48,1","trace,46,2","tracers,29,6","track,4,1","tracking,11,1,25,2,26,2,27,1","tract,40,1,41,5,42,2,43,3,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,53,1,51,2","trade,43,2,48,1","train,3,1","training,1,1,2,1","transaction,4,2,6,2,7,2,29,2,19,2,22,2","transactions,27,2","transfer,25,1,27,1","transfers,1,1,27,1","transformation,39,1","transparent,29,3","transport,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","transportation,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2,46,2,47,2","travis,1,1,21,1","treated,1,1,4,4,16,2,45,1","treating,16,1","treatment,44,2","treats,16,1","trekking,21,1","triaxial,12,1","tri-axial,29,1","trick,15,1","tried,15,1","triethylenetetramine,40,1,41,2","trigger,48,1,49,1,51,1","trout,46,1,47,1","truck,44,1","true,7,1","tsca,39,2,40,2,41,2,42,2,43,2,45,2,46,2,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","tsrn,46,1","tube,4,4,15,2","tubes,15,1","tubing,1,1,4,10,8,2,15,12,12,1,20,1,52,9","tubular,1,1,16,2","turn,3,2,6,1,15,2,29,3","turned,18,1","turn-out,46,1,47,1","turns,4,1,15,1,16,1,37,1","twa,46,2,47,13","twaron,24,1","twaron&reg,24,1","tweezers,48,1,49,1,51,1","twil,37,1","twill,1,8,29,13,12,10,14,15,16,3,37,33","twills,14,1","twist,15,2","twisting,15,4","two,4,1,15,4,29,1,16,5,18,1,37,1,41,1,42,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","two-component,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","txs62,29,5","txs85,29,1,37,2","tying,15,1","type,4,6,8,1,9,3,15,1,30,3,13,2,14,3,16,3,24,7,25,1,32,1,37,1,39,2,44,1,46,1,47,1","type&amp,4,1","types,1,1,15,1,13,2,14,2,18,1","types. ,16,1","typical,4,1,13,1,14,1,53,2","typically,1,5,4,3,15,3,12,1,13,3,14,1,16,5,17,4,18,2,25,1,26,3","typicaly,12,1","tyv,10,1","tyvek,1,4,10,1","tyveksuite,10,1","u.n,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","u.s,40,1,45,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","u.s.a,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","uk,1,1","ulceration,40,1","un,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,3,47,2,48,1,49,1,51,1","uncertain,39,1","uncolored,4,2","unconscious,44,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","uncontrolled,46,3,47,3","undamaged,25,1,38,1","undeliverable,25,1","under,1,1,9,1,15,1,30,1,14,12,18,2,25,3,26,3,27,2,32,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,46,1,47,2,48,12,49,12,51,12,52,4","underlying,16,1","underneath,37,2","understand,3,1,15,1,26,1,27,1,32,1,38,1","understanding,26,1","understood,15,1","uneven,15,1","unfortunately,15,1,18,1","uni,1,13,2,1,4,1,7,12,15,2,12,3","unidirectional,4,1,7,5","uni-directional,7,3","uniformly,15,1","union,1,1,27,2","unique,15,1,12,1","unis,7,1","unit,9,1,30,1","united,26,3,46,2,47,2","units,16,1","universal,46,1,47,1","universities,27,1","university,21,1","unknown,44,1,52,1","unless,3,1,11,1,23,2,25,1,26,6,39,1,46,1","unlike,37,1","unlikely,25,1,26,2,53,1","unnecessarily,45,1","unscheduled,48,1,49,1,51,1","until,15,2,16,1,17,1,47,2","untitled,5,4,34,4,37,4","untreated,4,3","unused,25,1,38,1,46,1,47,1","unusual,44,1,46,1,47,1,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","update,4,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","updated,6,1,15,1","updates,6,1","up-front,9,1,30,1","upgrade,5,1","upon,16,2,26,1,39,1,40,1,41,2,42,1,43,1,45,1,48,1,49,2,51,2","upper,7,1,40,1,44,1,53,1","ups,8,1,9,1,30,1,26,7","urethane,4,1,15,3,13,2,16,1,18,2","us-3,3,1","usa,1,2,3,6,9,1,30,1,12,3,26,13,27,3,32,1,38,5","use,1,2,4,19,6,2,7,2,8,4,9,9,15,17,29,3,30,9,10,2,12,2,13,3,16,5,18,5,19,2,21,2,26,1,32,8,37,9,38,9,39,2,40,9,41,11,42,9,43,9,44,8,45,5,46,7,47,8,48,5,49,7,53,5,51,7,52,1","use. ,16,1","used,4,2,7,1,8,2,9,9,15,5,30,9,10,1,13,7,14,3,16,3,17,4,24,1,37,2,39,2,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,44,3,45,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,53,1,51,2,52,1","used. ,16,1","user,9,1,30,1,38,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,44,2,46,1,47,1,48,2,49,2,51,2,52,1","users,3,2,44,1","uses,8,2,9,1,30,1,10,1,16,1,26,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1,45,1","usetreated,4,1","using,1,1,3,2,4,2,9,2,15,12,30,2,13,1,16,5,18,2,37,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,44,1,46,1,47,1","usps,26,5","usspeedskating,1,1,21,1","usually,15,3,16,1,22,1,26,1,39,2","uto-measure,9,2,30,2","uv,13,4,18,1","vac,16,1","vacuum,8,17,15,2,16,17,44,1,45,1,48,1,49,1,51,1","value,11,1,44,1,48,2,49,2,51,2","valued,11,1","values,1,1","vapor,15,2,32,1,38,1,39,5,40,5,41,3,42,6,43,5,44,1,45,2,46,4,47,3,48,1,49,1,51,1,52,1","vapors,39,3,40,3,41,5,42,4,43,5,46,3,47,3,52,1","variations,9,1,30,1","varies,6,1","various,3,2,8,1,44,1","vary,6,1,29,1,32,1,39,1,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","ve,15,1,22,2","vehicle,21,1","veil,29,1","vek,53,2","veneers,9,1,30,1","ventilate,40,1,41,1,42,1,43,1","ventilated,9,1,30,1,41,1,47,2","ventilation,32,1,38,1,39,2,40,5,41,3,42,4,43,4,44,2,45,2,46,3,47,6,52,2","venturi,8,2","verified,26,1","vermiculite,44,1","versatile,9,1,30,1","versio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arrFiles=new Array();arrFiles[0]=new Array(1,"","10 Dec 2009","http://www.sollercomposites.com,carbon fiber,carbon fiber sleeve,Kevlar sleeve, fiberglass sleeves,carbon fiber fabric,epoxy,west system epoxy,nitrile,gloves,nitrile gloves,aramid,fiberglass,kevlar,tape,biaxial tape, biaxial sleeve","sleeves,sleeve,fabrics,fabric,sock,socks,shaft,shafts,composite,composites,epoxy,west, kevar, fiberglass, system,west system epoxy,soller,soller composites,soller paddles,twill,plain,H8,H5,online,store,weaves,system,deals,custom,safety equipment, respira","Discounted Carbon fiber fabric &amp; Carbon fiber, fiberglass, fiberglass sleeves, and kevar sleeves (plain, twill,H8, H5),products - shafts,composites, carbon tape, UNI, biaxial sleeve, biaxial tape, respirator","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Welcome to Soller Composites! Our customers are our priority !: Your packing and customer service is fantastic, prompt, expert assistance and excellent website to shop from , still #1 for service, Excellent product. Superb communication , packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from , beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful We are focused on providing great products, at great prices and exceptional service! Payment options: Please consider using our products and contact us with any questions. ...the entire 2009 World Championship Relay Team (Jordan Malone (zylon), Apolo Anton Ohno (zylon), JR Celski and Ryan Bedford) was wearing (Soller Composites) carbon on their finger tips. Also Jeff Simon (carbon helmet), Travis Jayner, Kimberly Derrick (zylon), Katherine Reutter, Alyson Dudek, Jessica Smith, and Lana Ghering are also wearing the tips. That \'s almost all of the National team plus most of the other development teams here as well. Courtesy of: Jordan Malone USSpeedskating 2009 World Champion 24hr Online payment options: . . . . or other options: Personal, Business, or Bank Checks, Wire Transfers, Western Union, Money Orders , POs (USA Gov.), for additional options, please click here Materials &amp; Products ***All products are 1st Quailty*** 100% Carbon Fiber Fabrics (1) Best industry packing! Click Here for more info. ................. 1K Carbon Fiber Fabrics (typically 3-4oz/sq yrd) What \'s New! (our colored composite processes are patent pending) ................. 3K Carbon Fiber Fabrics (typically 5-6oz/sq yrd) New Improved! (Jan 2009) C o l o r e d Biaxial Carbon Hybrid Sleeving (tubular hybrid composite fabric). Also now in more colors! Colors from Left to Right: White, Pink, Yellow, Orange , Red , Lime Green , Dark Green , Light Brown , Gray , Blue , Purple , Light Blue Also available Solid Colors! Click here for more info ................. 6K Carbon Fiber Fabrics (typically 8-11oz/sq yrd) ............... 12K Carbon Fiber Fabrics (typically 18-20ozs/sq yrd) .............. 24K Carbon Fiber Fabrics (typically 20+ozs/sq yrd) Aramid (ex. Kevlar) Fabrics (2) ............... Kevlar Fabric ............. ............... Ballistic Zylon Fabric (Zylon HM) 3K Carbon Hybrid Fabrics (3) ............... Carbon/Kevlar Fabrics - Yellow , Blue, Red , Orange ............... Carbon/Basalt Fabrics ..........._.. Carbon/Fiberglass Fabrics Fiberglass Fabrics (4) _____ __ Fiberglass fabric (e-glass) _______ Silver Carbon Fiber (Silver Texalium) _............ Gold Carbon Fiber (Gold Texalium) _______ Blue Carbon Fiber (Blue Texalium) _... UNI & Carbon Fiber Tapes (5) __ 13 sizes of 4 &amp; 9oz Carbon Fiber UNI ____ Carbon Fiber Biaxial Tapes ___ Carbon Fiber UNI Sleeving Composite Biaxial Sleeving (6) Over 60 different Composites Sleeve types in-stock! Click here for more info 9oz Aerospace Grade Carbon UNI in-stock! 4oz Aerospace Grade Carbon UNI in-stock! (both are available in 1/2 to 12 widths!) Click here for more info Carbon, Basalt, &amp; Fiberglass Thread, Roving, Tow! Click here for more info Solid Carbon &amp; Hybrid Sheets Click here for more info Colored carbon/Fiberglass Hybrid Fabrics- 50 wide -click here (our colored composite processes are patent pending) Blue &amp; Gold Texalium now in-stock!- Click here We never , under any circumstance, charge any Tax (Tax free NH USA) __ 19 sizes of Carbon Fiber Sleeves in-stock - __ 7 sizes of Carbon/Fiberglass Sleeves in-stock - __ 7 sizes of Carbon/Kevlar Sleeves in-stock - __ 10 sizes of Kevlar Sleeves in-stock - __ 23 sizes of Fiberglass Sleeves in-stock - __ Basalt Sleeving - __ - Treated Heat Shrink Tubing for Composite Sleeving Epoxy & Related Products (7) Tools & Training Materials (8) Safety Equipment (9) Raw Fiber, Tow, Roving! &lt; --NEW (10) We Ship Same Day! Special Deals (11) Samples (12) Free Technical Documents: (13) Carbon Fiber Weaves Choosing the Appropriate Resin Making Composite Shafts Composite Fabric Techniques Resolving Epoxy Related Issues Prepreg fabrics Safety Info &amp; MSDSs Our Customer \'s Product Showcase (14) Custom Payment Page (15) Some Common Currency Values: 1.00 (US) = CAD Canada 1.00 (US) = GBP UK 1.00 (US) = AUD Australia 1.00 (US) = EUR Euro 1.00 (US) = ITL Italy 1.00 (US) = JPY Japan 1.00 (US) = KRW S. Korea Currency data courtesy coinmill.com 1.00 (US) = KRW South Korea 1.00 (US) = NOK Norway 1.00 (US) = NZD New Zealand 1.00 (US) = PTE Portugal 1.00 (US) = ESP Spain 1.00 (US) = SEK Switzerland 1.00 (US) = CHF France Click here for our composite strength chart! Our commitment t o excellence is only surpassed by our customer service! . ............................................................ Our Privacy Policy View Customer Comments & Feedback International Shipping Shipping Information & Guidelines Safety info &amp; MSDSs Payment Options Our Return & Refund Policy Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",45);arrFiles[1]=new Array(2,"sitemap.html","8 Oct 2007","Site Map","","","Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us Site Map Home Page --&gt; Composite Fabrics --&gt; Fabric Details UNI &amp; Carbon Fiber Tapes Composite Biaxial Sleeving --&gt; Detailed Sleeve Specs Epoxy &amp; Related Products Tools &amp; Training Materials Safety Equipment Special Deals Samples Free Technical Documents --&gt; Weave Definitions , Choosing the Appropriate Resin , Making Composites Shafts , Resolving Common Epoxy Issues Our Customer \'s Product Showcase Custom Payment Page Our Privacy Policy Safety info &amp; MSDSs Customer Comments &amp; Feedback Payment Options International Shipping Shipping Information &amp; Guidelines Our Return &amp; Refund Policy Contact Us --&gt; Payment Options Index of Materials and Products On-line Cart ",13);arrFiles[2]=new Array(3,"callus.html","6 Oct 2008","Soller Composites Contact info ","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Please Contact Us! Email: inform ation @sol a rcomposites.com - Sales &amp; Other information We always respond to email within 1 business day. In the very rare case that you don \'t receive a response from us within 24 hours, please send us another email or call us. Regarding free technical advise - Please note that we have extensive experience using our products and building composite structures. That being said, please understand that we are a heavily discounted distributor &amp; retailer. Because our profit margins are low, we can \'t afford to spend time providing composite structural engineering advise, explaining various techniques, or providing how-to instruction over the phone or via email. If you get stuck, have a specific question, or need help choosing the correct material we are more than happy to try to help you. We also have published various free technical papers for our customers at the bottom left of our main web page. We hope you find these helpful. Thank you! Phone: 1 (603) 998 1947 We are happy to receive calls and provide advise world-wide! Call us free world-wide! Call us free world-wide using Skype (see www.Skype.com ). Our contact name is: sollercomposites Please note that we do have voice-mail for our Skype incoming calls. Returning calls: Inside the USA &amp; Canada: We are always happy to return calls within the USA and Canada! Outside the USA Canada: We are happy to return calls to anyone in any country we ship to ( click here to see our International country list ). Please be aware that we are charged long distance fees to return calls outside the USA. Therefore, there is a 50.00 min order ONLY if you request we contact you to place a phone order outside the USA (this restriction does not apply to any Skype users world-wide, since there is no charge to call Skype users anywhere in the world). Receiving calls: We are happy to receive calls and emails world-wide. FAX: 1 (815) 642 9593 Address: Soller Composites, LLC 87 Hill Rd Franklin , NH 03235 USA Business Hours: Office Hours : Monday-Friday 9 :00am-6:00pm ( EST ); M-F 6pm - 9pm by chance ( EST ) After Hours Orders &amp; Inquiries : Monday-Friday 6 :00pm-9:00pm ( EST ) (Please feel free to call with your orders after hours!) Pick-up Hours : b y appointment - please call ahead EST -Eastern Standard Time (same as New York City) ***Save on Shipping, pick it up yourself!*** Payment Options: Please c lick here to see detailed payment options Owner: Jon Soller Directions: We are located in central New Hampshire, 30 min north of the state capital (Concord) Franklin, NH (above) We are located in the ACME Staple Facility. Please go to rear of facility and call us at 603 998 1947. Pickups welcome, but please call prior to arriving! Payment for pick-ups must occur prior to arrival unless paying with cash. Our new facility is not suited for tours &amp;/or casual visits. We have no store on-site. Due to the propriatary nature of many of our products &amp; processes, for the safety of our customers &amp; for insurance reasons, we no longer permit customers inside our building (very sorry). From Concord, NH: (call before arriving) 1. Merge onto I-93 N 16.3 mi 2. Take exit 19 for RT-132 toward Northfield/Franklin 0.1 mi 3. Turn left at Park St/RT-132 Continue to follow RT-132 1.1 mi to stop light in downtown Tilton (old train station on left) 4. Turn left at Main St/RT-11/US-3 Continue to follow RT-11 4.6 mi. (at the end of 4.6mi. you will go over a large bridge and come to a T at a light, make a right here) 5. Continue on N Main St/RT-3A Continue to follow RT-3A 1.0 mi (look for ACME Staple building on right) 6. Go to rear of building and call 603 998 1947. Calling ahead is required... Please call or email us , we would love to hear from you! ",21);arrFiles[3]=new Array(4,"composites/carbon%20fiber%20sleeves.html","28 Nov 2009","http://composites.sollerpaddles.com,carbon-fiber,carbon,fiber,sleeve,fabric","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Page Index ( click below for ): Carbon UNI Sleeves Carbon/Fiberglass Sleeves Carbon/Kevlar Sleeves Kevlar Sleeves Fiberglass Sleeves Basalt Sleeves We accept the following credit cards via phone: MC, VISA, AX, &amp; Discover! 100% Carbon Fiber Biaxial Sleeves Natural Color: Black per foot ft/lb /lb / min. Wholesale lbs order Diameter Size/ Tensile Strength Type &amp; oz/sq yrd Estimated Min-Max Diameter 1ft+ 10ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ To purchase Sleeves, follow these 3 easy steps below: 0.25Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.3 0.09-0.29 0.71 0.71 0.71 0.71 265.2 75.69/10 1) Select a Sleeve &amp; Color Carbon 0.25 Carbon 0.5 Carbon 0.75 Carbon 1.0 Carbon 1.25 Light Carbon 1.25 Hvy Carbon 1.5 Light Carbon 1.5 Heavy Carbon 2.0 Light Carbon 2.0 Heavy Carbon 2.5 Medium Carbon 2.5 Heavy Carbon 3.0 Hvy Carb 4.0 Hvy 15.1 Std Carbon 5.0 Carbon 6.0 Carbon 8.0 Carbon 10.0 Carbon 12.0 Carbon 15.0 Carbon 18.0 Carbon 24.0 Carbon/Fiberglass 0.5 Carbon/Fiberglass 1.0 Carbon/Fiberglass 1.5 Carbon/Fiberglass 2.0 Carbon/Fiberglass 2.5 Carbon/Fiberglass 3.0 Carbon/Fiberglass 4.0 Carbon/Kevlar 0.5 Carbon/Kevlar 1.0 Carbon/Kevlar 1.0 Hvy Carbon/Kevlar 1.5 Carbon/Kevlar 2.0 Carbon/Kevlar 2.5 Carbon/Kevlar 3.0 Kevlar 0.25 Kevlar 0.5 Kevlar Hvy 0.5 Kevlar 0.75 Kevlar 1.0 Kevlar 1.5 Kevlar 2.0 Kevlar 2.5 Kevlar 3.0 Kevlar 10.0 Fiberglass 0.25 light Fiberglass 0.5 light Fiberglass 0.5 heavy Fiberglass 0.75 light Fiberglass 1.0 light Fiberglass 1.0 heavy Fiberglass 1.5 light Fiberglass 1.5 heavy Fiberglass 2.0 light Fiberglass 2.0 heavy Fiberglass 3.0 light Fiberglass 3.0 heavy Fiberglass 4.0 light Fiberglass 4.0 heavy Fiberglass 5.0 light Fiberglass 5.0 heavy Fiberglass 6.0 light Fiberglass 7.0 light Fiberglass 7.0 heavy Fiberglass 9.0 light Fiberglass 9.0 heavy Fiberglass 11.0 heavy Fiberglass 12.0 light Basalt 2.0 med Sleeve Type&amp; Size Choose Natural Red Black Orange Blue Green Pink White Purple Grey Yellow Light Blue Neon Green Black/Red Hybrid Black/Blue Hybrid Black/Green Hybrid Black/Orange Hybrid Black/White Hybrid Black/Purple Hybrid Black/Grey Hybrid Black/Yellow Hybrid Black/Light Blue Hybrid Black/Neon Green Hybrid Black/Pink Hybrid a color Colors other than Natural typically delay shipment up to 72hrs Click here to learn more about our colorants. Please call for other colors. Number of ft to buy Total for Sleeve w/o Shipping Click here to calc circumference and diameter 0.5 Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.3 0.14-0.6 1.22 1.22 1.22 1.22 132.6 75.64 /10 0.75Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.9 0.29-0.9 1.84 1.84 1.84 1.74 82.9 75.64 /10 1.0 Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.3 0.36-1.2 2.44 2.44 2.44 2.44 66.3 75.64 /10 1.25Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.0 0.55-1.3 2.74 2.74 2.74 2.74 55.2 75.64 /10 1.25Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 21.3 0.70-1.3 3.09 3.09 2.28 2.28 20.7 46.99/ 1 2) Select the # of ft you want &amp; click Update 1.5 Std 3K/AeroSpace light 8.3 0.6-1.75 2.99 2.89 2.79 2.69 44.2 75.64 /10 1.5 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 19.9 0.76-1.75 3.49 3.39 2.73 2.73 18 48.99/ 1 For Detailed Specs Click Here! 2.0 Std 3K/AeroSpace light 7.5 0.76-2.23 2.89 2.79 2.69 2.08 36.4 69.99/1 2.0 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 19.9 1.1-2.10 3.99 3.99 3.89 3.37 13.8 46.9 9/10 2.5 Std 6K/AeroSpace med 11.9 1-2.9 3.99 3.99 3.89 3.79 18.4 58.67/ 10 2.5 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 19.9 1.2-2.9 5.50 5.40 5.30 5.20 11 46.99 /10 3.0 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 19.9 1.4-3.5 5.99 5.99 5.89 5.79 9.2 46.99 /10 3) Add your item to your cart 4.0 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 15.1 1.6-4.4 5.45 5.17 5.17 5.17 9.1 46.99/ 1 We ship same day! (M - F) 5.0 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 14.4 1.9-5.7 6.59 6.59 6.59 6.59 7.6 46.99/ 10 6.0 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 14.5 2.5-7.25 8.89 7.46 7.46 7.46 6.3 46.99/ 1 8.0 Std 6K/AeroSpace med 11 2.9-9.6 9.14 7.03 7.03 7.03 6.4 44.99/ 1 We weigh all our sleeves to insure you get the proper length, (what you paid for)! That is, since (biaxial) sleeves can expand and contract by as much as 30%, we weigh all sleeves and cut the appropriate length using manufacture \'s specs. 10 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 14.1 4.0-12.7 13.99 13.49 12.99 12.05 3.9 46.99/10 12 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 13.9 6.5-14 15.99 15.49 14.99 14.24 3.3 46.99/10 (min order 19ft if none in-stock) 15 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 13.9 8-17 18.08/ft 2.6 46.99/10 (min order 16ft if none in-stock) 18 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 13.9 10-23.3 22.36/ft 2.2 46.99/10 (min order 12ft if none in-stock) 24 Std 12K/AeroSpace hvy 13.9 14-26 29.37/ft 1.6 46.99/10 Wholesale Sleeves are available in light , med , or heavy weights of any std diameter and length starting at 10 lbs Carbon Fiber Unidirectional Sleeves Please Click Here 50% Carbon Fiber / 50% Fiberglass Biaxial Sleeves These custom colored sleeves typically ship next business day! ***We can color-match! Click here for more info... *** See more examples at: Our Customer \'s Showcase Avail in virtually any color (examples below): Featured in RodMaker Magazine : New Improved (Jan 2009) &amp; now more colors! Colors from Left to Right: White, Pink, Yellow, Orange , Red , Lime Green , Dark Green , Light Brown , Gray , Blue , Purple , Light Blue Finished orange shaft close-up &amp; comments, courtesy of one of our customers: At this point I would like to thank Jon Soller of Soller Composites for all his help, great products, and top notch customer service. Keep it up!!! per foot Wholesale pricing (uncolored) uncolored /ft Colored Diameter Type 1ft+ 15ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ Tier 1 (10lbs+) Wholesale Sleeves are available in light , med , or in heavy weights of any diameter and length, starting at 10 lbs Please use the yellow section above to purchase these sleeves 0.5 light 0.99 1.44 1.37 1.30 1.19 1216ft+ 46.47/lb 1.0 light 1.09 2.49 2.29 2.14 1.99 607ft+ 46.47/lb 1.5 light 2.25 2.99 2.85 2.71 2.31 405ft+ 46.47/lb 2.0 light 1.99 4.29 4.09 3.74 3.49 338t+ 46.47/lb 2.5 Med 3.24 5.49 5.21 4.64 4.11 169ft+ 36.79/lb We are a factory direct distributor 3.0 Med 3.74 5.99 5.70 5.42 4.61 142ft+ 36.79/lb 4.0 light 4.99 6.25 5.99 5.59 4.99 179ft+ N/A Colored Sleeve feedback: Excellent material, fast friendly service. Thanks! For Detailed Specs Click Here! We encourage our customers to buy samples of colored fabrics to see the actual colors before ordering. Please note that colored sleeving is for applications up to 150F Click here for samples Natural Color: Yellow&amp;Black Contact us for other co l o r s! 50% Carbon Fiber / 50% Kevlar Biaxial Sleeves per foot Wholesale pricing Diameter Type 1ft+ 15ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ Tier 1 (10lbs+) Please use the yellow section above to purchase these sleeves 0.5 light 1.44 1.37 1.30 1.19 147ft/ lb 61.92/lb Wholesale Sleeves are available in light , med , or in heavy weights of any diameter and length, starting at 10 lbs For Detailed Specs Click Here! 1.0 light 2.49 2.29 2.14 1.99 73ft/ lb 61.92/lb 1.0 Hvy 2.99 2.79 2.64 2.49 37ft/ lb 46.95/lb We are a factory direct distributor 1.5 light 2.99 2.85 2.71 2.31 49ft/ lb 61.92/lb 2.0 light 1.99 1.99 1.99 1.99 41ft/ lb 61.92/lb 2.5 Med 3.24 3.24 3.24 3.24 20ft/ lb 50.68/lb 3.0 Med 3.74 3.74 3.74 3.74 17ft/ lb 50.68/lb *** We do c o l o r our Kelvar sleeves, please contact us for a quote. *** 100% Kevlar (Aramid) Biaxial Sleeves per foot Wholesale pricing Diameter Type 1ft+ 15ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ Tier 1 (10lbs+) Wholesale Sleeves are available in light , med , or in heavy weights of any diameter and length, starting at 10 lbs Please use the yellow section above to purchase these sleeves 0.25 light 0.99 0.95 0.91 0.78 334ft/ lb 48.70/lb 0.5 light 1.44 1.37 1.30 1.19 167ft/ lb 48.70/lb 0.5 heavy 2.49 1.97 1.80 1.69 70ft/ lb 44.11/lb 0.75 light 2.19 2.08 1.97 1.74 119ft/ lb 48.70/lb Natural Color: Yellow 1.0 light 2.49 2.29 2.14 1.99 83ft/ lb 48.70/lb 1.5 light 2.24 2.24 2.24 2.24 56ft /lb 48.70/lb For Detailed Specs Click Here! 2.0 light 3.25 3.25 3.25 3.25 46ft/ lb 48.70/lb 2.5 med 3.99 3.49 3.09 2.99 23ft/ lb 45.25/lb 3.0 heavy 7.59 7.59 7.19 7.11 12ft/ lb 44.11/lb From 3 to 12 diameter - &gt; 10 heavy 10.99 10.99 9.99 8.99 6ft/ lb 39.99/lb 100% Fiberglass Biaxial Sleeves Also Available in Colors! per foot Wholesale pricing Tier 1 (10 lbs+) Wholesale Sleeves are available in light , med , or in heavy weights of any diameter and length starting at 10 lbs Diameter Type 1ft+ 15ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ 0.25 light 0.39 0.39 0.38 0.35 191ft/ lb 22.44/lb Please use the yellow section above to purchase these sleeves 0.5 light 0.49 0.45 0.41 0.39 96ft/ lb 22.44/lb 0.5 heavy 1.59 1.52 1.30 1.18 40ft/ lb 20.88/lb Natural Color: Silver-White (turns clear when used with epoxy and other resins) 0.75 light 0.79 0.79 0.79 0.79 60ft/ lb 22.44/lb 1.0 light 0.99 0.89 0.79 0.69 48ft/ lb 22.44/lb 1.0 heavy 2.39 2.28 1.94 1.75 18ft/ lb 20.88/lb 1.5 light 1.49 1.39 1.29 1.19 32ft/ lb 22.44/lb New -&gt; 1.5 heavy 2.74 2.54 2.34 2.04 12ft/ lb 20.88/lb 2.0 light 1.79 1.69 1.59 1.49 27ft/ lb 22.44/lb For Detailed Specs Click Here! 2.0 heavy 3.99 3.89 3.79 3.69 10ft/ lb 20.88/lb 3.0 light 2.59 2.49 2.39 2.29 18ft/ lb 22.44/lb 3.0 heavy 5.49 5.39 5.29 4.99 7ft/ lb 20.88/lb 4.0 light 3.39 3.29 3.19 3.09 14ft/ lb 22.44/lb 4.0 heavy 5.99 5.89 5.69 Teir1 6ft/ lb 20.88/lb 5.0 light 3.99 3.89 3.79 3.69 11ft/ lb 22.44/lb 5.0 heavy 6.89 6.65 5.66 Teir1 5ft/ lb 20.88/lb 6.0 light 4.79 4.69 4.59 4.49 10ft/ lb 22.44/lb 7.0 light 5.99 5.89 5.79 5.69 8ft/ lb 22.44/lb 7.0 heavy 8.99 8.89 8.79 Teir1 4ft/ lb 20.88/lb 9.0 light 6.99 6.89 6.79 6.69 6ft/ lb 22.44/lb 9.0 heavy 11.29 10.99 Teir1 Teir1 3ft/ lb 20.88/lb 11.0 heavy 13.49 13.29 Teir1 Teir1 2.4ft/ lb 20.88/lb 12.0 light 8.99 8.49 7.99 Teir1 4.7ft/ lb 22.44/lb 13-27 Available as custom order (typically takes 1 week to ship) 100% Basalt Biaxial Sleeves 40% Stronger , Cheaper , Softer , &amp; Higher Temperature (1800 degrees F) than Fiberglass! Thermal protection: -260C to + 982C , -436F to + 1800F (1508F Sustained) Better Tensile &amp; Compression Strength than Fiberglass Diameter Type Estimated Min-Max Diameter 1ft+ 15ft+ 30ft+ 60ft+ Tier 1 (10 lbs+) Please use the yellow section above to purchase these sleeves 2.0 Med 0.65- 2.6 1.99 1.99 1.99 1.99 11.9 ft/lb 17.00/lb In-stock! For Detailed Specs Click Here! Use basalt sleeves just like fiberglass, just cheaper &amp; stronger! Info on high temp resins: -Epoxy resins top out at about 500 to 550 F. Note that higher temp epoxies can be toxic to work with -some Phynolic resins can handle temps up tp about 900 F+- but are not available except for very large Industrail customers. -Cermanic resins can handle temps ip to 4000F, are cheap, but are britlle - Other published non-metalic resins typical haddle temps up to 900F, but are not available to the public - Another solution is carboncarbon, but this is not a resin and such products are very expensive. Note that we do not keep track of, and therefore can not recommend, suppliers of these resins (sorry...) Professional Looking Shafts M ade Easy! Using our (Patent Pending) Specially Designed Heat-Shrink Tubing for Creating Finished Composite Shafts Customer comments: ...We recently competed in a national competition... Our rockets airframe was made of two layers of CF sock with heat shrink tube for compression...We won the altitude competition by a huge margin...Next year we will be ordering more... Thanks for your great product and awesome customer service Quickly and easily create professional looking shafts (in 4 easy steps): 1) Slip this special flexible heat shrink tubing over top of your epoxied sleeve. Note: this heat-shrink tubing works great around bends too! 2) Use a heat gun (starting in the middle of the shaft/sleeve and working your way to the ends of the shaft). The heat-shrink tubing will squeeze out excess epoxy and provide you with that smooth professional finish! 3) After the epoxy dries, use a sharp seam-cutter (from your local fabric store) to remove the shrink tubing. 4) Sand (if desired) the shaft lightly with 1500 or 2000 grit sand paper for a few seconds, then add your final clear coat (spray all-weather urethane or wipe-on a tiny amount of epoxy - just enough to barely wet the shaft and give it that gorgeous shine [as thin as possible - no weight added here] ). Let dry, you \'re done! F or more info. on how to make shafts, Click Here! Shrink tubing stretches very little, so (for ex.) a 1.8 shaft should actually use the next size (a 3.0 composite shrink tube). A 1.25 shaft should use a 1.5 shrink tube. The tubing shrinks very little lengthwise. Allow 1inch for every 10ft. Circumference &lt; - &gt; Diameter Conversion tool: Circumference: &lt; - &gt; Diameter Enter either the Circumference or Diameter (leave the other entry 0), then click the Calculate button above Circumference Definition - The length completely around the outide of a circle or object Diameter Defintion -The total length across the center of a *perfectly round circle *When calculating the diameter of an object that is not a perfectly round circle, use the tool above by entering the circumference of the object to determine the effective diameter. Sold by .. Tubing Diameter Cost/ft Max. Shrinkage the ft ... 0.25 0.25 2/1        Total Number of ft/sections buying 0.25 inch diameter 0.37 inch diameter 0.5 inch diameter 0.79 inch diameter 1.1 inch diameter 1.6 inch diameter 2.0 inch diameter 3.1 inch diameter 5.9 inch diameter 7.1 inch diameter Treated - for use w/resins Untreated - not for use w/resins select treated for use with resins (such as Epoxy or Polyester resins), or untreated (not recommended for use with resins) ***DO NOT usetreated sleeving for electrical applications!*** the ft ... 0.37 0.32 2/1 the ft ... 0.5 0.39 2/1 the ft ... 0.79 0.79 2/1 the ft ... 1.1 0.89 2/1 the ft ... 1.6 1.18 2/1 the ft ... 2 1.39 2/1 the ft ... 3.1 2.49 2/1 the ft ... 5.9 4.99 2/1 ***** Our shrink tubing is custom manufactured, treated, and processed specifically to work with composites! ***** the ft ... 7.1 5.99 2/1 Notes - IMPORTANT -- &gt; ***DO NOT use treated \' sleeving for electrical applications! *** Do not use untreated sleeving for composite applications! Note - Since all shrink tubing is shipped flat, the width of a flat shrink tube is 1/2 the length of the circumference (which is wider than the diameter). Customer Comments: -...Arrived great. Thank you for the prompt, expert assist and excellent website to shop from -... This seller is simply the best. Excellent product and a top notch dealer -... I got your carbon, and beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful....Thanks! -...Thanks again for your excellent customer service... -...Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction.. -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again - ... As promised and more -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again Our colorants (used for non-Natural colored sleeves) are slightly electrically conductive and are therefore not intended for electrical applications or any other application where this conductivity is specifically not desired . Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLC \'s sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",181);arrFiles[4]=new Array(5,"composites/Movie.html","6 Jan 2006","Untitled Document","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 Back to Sleeve Pricing Page Please upgrade your browser to see this video, thank you! If video does not play try Clicking Here or Click Here to try Quicktime Media Player Playing Windows Media Player This page may take at least several seconds to play (this is a 4Mb movie) ",3);arrFiles[5]=new Array(6,"composites/compositespools.html","5 Aug 2008","* Soller Composites * Carbon Fiber Fabric","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Fiberglass Composite Fabrics - This page is updated often, to make sure you see the latest updates, click refresh in your browser often. if On-line cart does not open, please turn off your Pop-up blocker... Fiberglass Fabrics Starts Here Photo Material Strength K/sizing lbs of Fiber /spool /lb Car-12K-tow Carbon Tow/Roving/thread 530Ksi 12K 1.6 26.00 18.00 A dd spools to my cart Photo Material Strength K/sizing lbs of Fiber /spool /lb Car-3K-tow Carbon Tow/Roving/thread 530Ksi 3K up to 4 lbs 18/lb 18.00 A dd spools of lbs to my cart We will ship a spool closest to the lbs you ordered &amp; refund any overpayment Photo Material Strength K/sizing lbs of Fiber per spool /spool /lb FG-tow E-glass Fiberglass Tow/Roving/thread ~220Ksi 3K 10 to 40 lbs Varies based on spool size 1.00 Please contact us to purchase this product size all spools vary in size/weight. Photo Material Strength K/sizing lbs of Fiber /spool /lb Basalt-tow Basalt Tow/Roving/thread ~330Ksi 3K 2.2 11.00 5.00 A dd spools to my cart Basalt-tow Basalt Tow/Roving/thread ~330Ksi 3K 15 75.00 5.00 A dd spools to my cart We can process credit cards over the phone! We accept: We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping! If ordering via our on-line cart, we will refund you any over-shipping charges when we ship you item(s)! Email us your order and we will send you a custom link with the correct shipping. Or call us with a credit card and we will only charge your card the correct amount after we ship your item(s). Thank you! Customer Comments: -...This seller is simply the best. Excellent product and a top notch dealer -...I got your carbon, and beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful...Thanks -... Thanks again for your excellent customer service... -... Excellent product. Superb communication... -...great stuff, super fast ship -...thanks guys nice product, carbon fiber was beautiful shipping was great thanks... -... Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction.. -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again -...As promised and more -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLC \'s sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",33);arrFiles[6]=new Array(7,"composites/carbon%20fiber%20uni-fabric.html","28 Oct 2009","* Soller Composites * Carbon UNI &amp; Biaxial Tape Page","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 We ship same day! Unidirectional Carbon Fiber Fabric Carbon fiber unidirectional reinforcing fabrics are used to improve tensile, compressive strength, and stiffness in one direction only. This special unidirectional carbon fiber is ideal to maximize flexibility &amp; aesthetics. The binder (that tiny amount of material in all UNIs that hold the strands together) is only on one side of the fabric , making this product perfect for both aesthetic purposes and ideal for precise structural reinforcement applications. We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: MC. VISA, AX, and Discover Please contact us! Front &amp; Back of UNI (notice the tiny strips of hot-melt binder) Specs: 9.0oz. sq yard/305gsm Super High Quality, T700 High Modulus, 711Ksi, 34Msi, 0.014 Thickness, 15.9ft/lb Carbon Fiber Uni-directional fabric Width Accurate to 1ft+ 10ft+ 25ft+ 50ft+ 75ft+ 100ft+ 1/2 0.1 - 0.40/ft - - - - 1 0.1 - 0.62 0.58 0.49 - - 2 0.1 - 1.15 1.07 0.91 - - Number of feet 10ft length 25ft length 50ft length 1/2 inch width 1 inch width 2 inch width 3 inch width 4 inch width 5 inch width 6 inch width 8 inch width 3 0.1 - 1.39 1.29 1.09 - - 4 0.1 - 1.59 1.49 1.29 - - 5 0.1 - 2.16 2.01 1.70 - - 6 0.1 - 2.31 2.15 1.70 - - 8 0.1 - 3.29 2.99 2.49 - - 12 . 0.5 3.39/ft 3.32 3.09 2.69 2.59 2.49 Number of feet 12 inch width 24 UNI is Hexcel \'s GA090 (T7) Specs: 8.9oz. sq yard/302gsm Super High Quality, T700 High Modulus, 711Ksi, 33Msi, 0.014 Thickness, 8ft/lb Carbon Fiber Uni-directional fabric Width Accurate to 1ft+ 10ft+ 25ft+ 50ft+ 75ft+ 100ft+ 24 . 0.5 5.99/ft 5.79 5.59 5.29 4.99 4.79 Number of feet 24 inch width Front &amp; Back of UNI (notice the tiny strips of hot-melt binder) Specs: 4.1oz. sq yard/139gsm Super High Quality, T700 High Modulus, 711Ksi, 34Msi, 0.006 Thickness, 35.2ft/lb Carbon Fiber Uni-directional fabric Width Accurate to 1ft+ 10ft+ 25ft+ 50ft+ 75ft+ 100ft+ 1/2 0.1 - 0.35/ft 0.30 - - - 1 0.1 - 0.40 0.36 0.29 - - 2 0.1 - 0.69 0.59 0.49 - - Number of feet 10ft length 25ft length 50ft length 1/2 inch width 1 inch width 2 inch width 3 inch width 4 inch width 5 inch width 6 inch width 8 inch width 3 0.1 - 0.90 0.84 0.79 - - 4 0.1 - 1.17 1.09 0.99 - - 5 0.1 - 1.49 1.39 1.29 - - 6 0.1 - 1.89 1.79 1.59 - - 8 0.1 - 1.89 1.79 1.79 - - 12 0.5 2.00/ft 1.91 1.89 1.79 1.79 1.79 Number of feet 12 inch width We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping plus 2 max. (for shipping materials). Please contact us for other sizes! We will refund you any over charges when we ship your item(s)! If you order online, our store may charge you too much for shipping . We will correct any over-charges before we ship your order! Unidirectional Carbon Fiber Sleeves These Carbon fiber UniDirectional reinforcing sleeves expand and contract around a shaft (the tiny binders are made of Spandex stretchable fibers). If you need strength in one direction and are working with a shaft, these sleeves are a dream come true! We ship same day! Diameter ft/lb Thickness Min/ Relaxed Max 1ft+ 15ft 30ft 60ft 11lbs+ oz./sq yrd (min/max diameter) Number of feet 0.5 to 1.1 inch UNI Sleeves 1.0 to 2.75 inch UNI Sleeves 1.75 to 4.5 inch UNI Sleeves 2.75 to 7 inch UNI Sleeves 3.5 to 9 inch UNI Sleeves 39 0.03 0.5 1.1 4.99 3.99 2.99 2.79 56.27/lb 18.8oz at 0.75 (28.2oz to 12.8oz) 23.4 0.03 1 2.75 6.24 5.24 4.49 3.99 56.12/lb 15.7oz at 1.5 (23.5oz to 8.5oz) 13.02 0.03 1.75 4.50 6.79 5.99 4.99 4.31 56.12/lb 16.9 at 2.5 (24.2oz to 13oz) 9.01 0.03 2.75 7.0 9.81 8.99 7.99 6.99 56.12/lb 16.3 at 3.75 (27.1oz to 8.7oz) 6.89 0.03 3.5 9.0 12.99 11.49 9.99 8.99 56.12/lb 16.8oz at 4.75 (22.8oz to 8.9) Strength 640Ksi Carbon Fiber Also feel free to email us your order and we will be glad to send you a custom link with the correct shipping. Or call us with a credit card and we will only charge your card the correct amount after we ship your item(s). Thank you! Carbon Fiber Biaxial Braided Tape Width 1 12 1ft+ 0.99 10ft+ 0.94 25ft 0.89 50ft 0.79 75ft 0.69 100ft+ 0.64 150ft 0.59 Number of feet   11.8oz sqyrd Max width: 3.0 146.7ft/lb Min width: 0.70 Thickness 0.017 Above Upper: Braided Carbon Fiber Tape - relaxed state Above Lower: Braided Carbon Fiber Tape - expanded state Width 2 12 1ft+ 2.29 10ft+ 2.19 25ft 1.99 50ft 1.89 75ft 1.79 100ft+ 1.59 150ft 1.34 Number of feet   13.4oz sqyrd Max width: 3.25 64.24ft/lb Min width: 1.75 Thickness 0.017 Width 4 12 1ft+ 2.99 10ft+ 2.89 25ft 2.79 50ft 2.49 75ft 2.29 100ft+ 2.09 150ft 1.99 Number of feet Max width: 7.25 13.5oz sqyrd Min width: 2.1 32.14ft/lb Thickness 0.028 Customer Comments: -... Excellent product. Superb communication... -...great stuff, super fast ship -...thanks guys nice product, carbon fiber was beautiful shipping was great thanks... -... Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction.. -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLC \'s sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",78);arrFiles[7]=new Array(8,"composites/tools.html","23 Jul 2009","**Soller Composites** Tools page","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 885- Vacuum Bagging Starter Kit 164.99 A complete starter kit for room temperature repairs and small laminating projects up to 13 square feet. The kit includes: We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: - -Venturi vacuum generator* with bronzemuffler* (1) - Vacuum Cups* (3) - 1/4 I.D. Vacuum Tubing* (10 \') - Vacuum Gauge (1) - Junction T barbs (2) - Release Fabric (15 sq. ft.) - Breather Fabric (15 sq. ft.) - Vacuum Bag Film (15 sq. ft.) - Vacuum Bag Sealant (25 \') - Complete kit instructions - 002-150 Vacuum Bagging Technique s MC. VISA, AX, JCB, Diners Club, and Discover Please contact us! Click here for to learn of other payment option Our online Store uses Paypal What \'s PayPal? The venturi generator develops over 20 inches Hg (mercury) of vacuum (10 psi) at 1 SCFM and is designed to run off of conventional shop air compressors delivering at least 60 psi at 2 SCFM. Have Questions? P lease contact us! We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping + 2 max. (for shipping materials). We will refund you any shipping over charges when we ship you item(s)! or please call us with a Credit Card Vacuum Bagging Materials 883 Vacuum Bag Sealant 9.99 Mastic tape sealant for airtight seals between vacuum bags and molds. Easy to work around difficult angles, patching small leaks in the vacuum system. 1/2 wide x 25 \' roll. Spare Vacuum Cups 2.99/each cup Fits 1/4 Vacuum Tubing. Same cups as in kit (above) 002-150 Vacuum Bagging Techniques (w/Epoxy problem solving guide) 4.99 Softcover-52 pages. A definitive guide to the principles and application of vacuum bagging techniques for laminating composi te materials with epoxy. Complete instructions describe various techniques; materials and equipment. Mold Release Wax 11.95 #8 Maximum Mold Release Wax. Used by more molders than any other wax (11oz) #87 High Temp Mold Release is a scientific blending of carnauba, synthetic waxes and thermo resins to provide consistent performance in high temperature molding. (11oz) ReleaseWax Type 8 Maximum 87 High Temp Mold Release Spray 19.75 Simply the best mold release spray in the market! Designed for repeated mold uses, this spray works like Teflon (nothing seems to stick to it)! If you are a professional composite builder, you owe it to yourself to try this mold release! (For Industrial Use Only-this item will ship UPS Ground) Please note that a 1 qt mold sealer is also available for 29.00 (please contact us for more info) Customer comments: ...the mold release and mold sealer work great. My parts almost fall out of the molds. What a difference. 19.75 34.99 Epoxy Spreaders &amp; Release Wedges 2 wide Spreader 0.80 . 4.8 wide Spreader 1.05 4 &amp; 6 long Release Wedges (4) 1.95 (6) 2.95 4 Wedge 1.95 6 Wedge 2.95 Standard Kevlar Scissors * Ergonomic, lightweight KEVLAR (Aramid) &amp; Composite Shears * Bow shaped blades are ice tempered for extra hardness assuring long life and maximum cutting power * Integral blade has fine serrations for a firm grip on slippery materials * Large handles with soft, rubber inserts provide a comfortable slip-proof grip and allow use with a glove * Adjustable pivot screw permits tension modification * Ambidextrous design allows correct cutting with either hand *** Generally not recommended for Zylon *** KEVLAR Shears/Scissors 34.99 11.25 long, 4.5 cut Cuts heavy Kevlar like its paper! 7 inch wide Roller Frame(7 inch + roller covers -see below) 5.69 Specially designed, high density polyurathane foam roller covers which are ideal for epoxy applications. The roller covers can be cut into smaller lengths to matchthe applciation area. Pack of 2 for 3.99 Graphite Powder is a fine black powder that can be mixed with WEST SYSTEM epoxy to produce a low-friction exterior coating with increased scuff resistance and durability. Epoxy/Graphite is commonly used as a bearing surfaces. 6.99 6oz 10.99 12oz Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",41);arrFiles[8]=new Array(9,"composites/Epoxy0308.html","9 Dec 2009","* Soller Composites * Epoxy &amp; Related products","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 The letters (A - D) next to the resin/hardener (ex 105A, 205A, 209C) are for matching quantity sizes. A is for a quart set, B (gal) gallon , C is 5 gal, D is 55 gal. 205 &amp; 206 are 5:1 resin to hardener mix, 207 &amp; 209 hardener are 3:1. That is, a 105A (qt) resin matches a 205A, 206A, 207SA or 209A hardener; A 105B matches a 205B, 206B, 207B or 209B hardener, etc. The resin &amp; hardener needs to be mixed in the correct ratio. We sell pump sets that correctly measure the ratios automatically for you. We sell kits below with everything you need or you can buy items individually. Note 207SA, 207SB are often referred to as 207A, 207B etc. Epoxy Kits We Ship same day if possible! (We sell only the very best epoxy- West Systems Brand!) We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: Premium All Weather Hardener Kit A: 65.99 Nitrile Gloves Size Small Medium Large XLarge 0.66pt 207SA Special Hardener 1qt 105A Resin A uto-measure Pump kit MC. VISA, AX, JCB, Diners Club, and Discover Please contact us! Click here to learn of other payment option Our online Store uses Paypal What \'s PayPal? Premium All Weather Hardener Kit B: 54.99 Hardener Type 205A 206A 0.44pt 205A or 206A Hardener 1qt 105A Resin, A uto-measure Pump kit Have Questions? P lease contact us! We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping + 2 max. (for shipping materials). We will refund you any shipping over charges when we ship you item(s)! or please call us with a Credit Card All Weather Hardener Kit C: 58.98 0.66pt 207SA Special 1qt 105A Resin Fast or Slow Hardener Kit D: 45.00 Hardener Type 205A 206A 205A Fast or 206A Slow Hardener 1qt 105A Resin INDIVIDUAL PRODUCTS UNIT SIZE Our PRICE West System Resins 105A Resin Qty: 1 qt. 28.99 105B Resin Qty: 0.98 gal. 73.99 105C Resin Please call for pricing 4.35 gal. 105E Resin Please call for pricing 52.03gal West Systems Hardeners 205A Fast Hardener Qty: 0.44 pt. 16.01 205B Fast Hardener Qty: 0.86 qt. 31.39 205C Fast Hardener Qty: Please call for pricing 0.94 gal. Please call 205E Fast Hardener 11.31gal. Please call 206A Hardener Qty: 0.44 pt. 16.01 206B Hardener Qty: 0.86 qt. 31.39 206C Hardener Qty: 0.94 gal. Please call 206E Slow Hardener (please call) 11.31gal. Please call 207A Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 0.66 pt. 29.99 207B Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 0.33 gal. 60.53 207C Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 1.45 gal. Please call 207E Special All Weather Hardener (please call) 17.34gal. Please call 209A Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 0.66 pt. 28.99 209B Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 0.33 gal. 55.99 209C Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 1.45 gal. Please call 209E Extra Slow Hardener (please call) 17.34gal Please call West Systems 5 Minute Epoxy Kits 865- 4oz Hardener &amp; 4oz. Resin Qty: 8fl oz. total 17.69 865- 16oz Hardener &amp; 16oz. Resin Qty: 32fl oz. total 39.49 Minipumps Auto-measuring pumps - no need to measure quantities yourself! (one squirt resin + one squirt hardener -perfect measuring every time!) 300 Mini Pump Set (for Group Size A, B or C) Set of 3 Pumps Qty: 10.99 Spare Hardener Pump (fits all sizes A, B, or C) for Hardener Type 205 206 207 209 1.00 C o l o r P i g m e n t s (1.0oz pigment covers approx 64sq ft) 1.0oz Epoxy Pigment Color Choice Yellow Light Blue Dark Blue **Clearance** 35% off **9.99** 4.0oz Epoxy Pigment Color Choice Light Blue Dark Blue **Clearance** 35% off **14.99** Detailed Epoxy Hardener Info Hardener Pot Life at 72F Pot Life at 95F Cure to Solid 72F Cure to Solid 95F Cure to Max Strength 72F Working Temp Range 205 9-12min not recommended 6-8hrs N/A 1-4days 40-88F 206 20-25min not recommended 9-12hrs N/A 1-4days 60-98F 207 22-27min not recommended 9-12hrs N/A 4-7days 64-100F 209 40-50min 15-20min 20-24hrs 6-8hrs 4-9days 70-108F Note 1/2 ounce resin will cover about 12 sq area. When to Choose the 207 (all weather) Hardener: We use and sell West System \'s 207 product ourselves, because it is the best epoxy available anywhere. Tests have shown that this product looks virtually brand new after a full year of harsh New England weather exposure. Note that the 207 is the clearest of all West System \'s epoxies. So when (and why) should you pay more for the 207 vs. the 205 or 206 hardener, or other Brand \'s cheaper epoxies? If your product will be exposed to water, humidity, large temperature variations, or direct sunlight, it is well worth the few extra dollars you spend up-front for the 207, vs. watching your product yellow or flake-off prematurely (often times within 1 year). If your application will be indoors and not directly exposed to sunlight, water, and humidity, you may want to consider using the less expensive 205 or 206 hardener. We buy, use ourselves (for our composites shop), and sell West System brand Epoxy only because it is the best. If there was an equivalent and cheaper product on the market, we wouldn \'t be using West Systems. Why use Epoxy vs. Vinylester vs. Polyester Resins Click Here Resolving Common Epoxy Related Issues Click Here All Epoxy is shipped via UPS and insured up to 100.00. We can only ship these products within the USA and Canada. Epoxy Fillers Filler Description 403 403 Microfibers are made of fine cotton fibers and is used as a thickening additive with resin/hardener to create a multi-purpose adhesive. Microfibers and epoxy are particularly effective in bonding wood. Epoxy thickened with microfibers provides good gap-filling qualities while retaining excellent wetting and penetration capabilities. Microfibers are used primarily in bonding and gap-filling applications. Microfibers are non-toxic, but care should be taken to avoid inhalation. Color: Off-White. 6oz. 6.99 20oz. 16.99 20lbs. 149.99 404 404 High-Density filler is a thickening additive developed for maximum physical properties in hardware bonding where high-cyclic loads are anticipated. It can also be used for filleting and gap-filling where maximum strength is necessary. May be added to the resin/hardener at a rate of 20 to 30% by weight, depending on the viscosity needed. Color: Off-White. 15.2oz. 9.99 43oz. 22.99 30lbs. 165.99 405 405 Filleting Blend is a strong, wood-toned filler for use in glue joints and fillets on naturally-finished wooden interiors. Mixes easily with epoxy and lets you create fillets that are smooth and require little sanding. Color is a consistent tan so it can be used to modify the shade of other West System fillers. 8oz. 9.99 406 406 Colloidal Silica is a thickening additive used to control the viscosity of epoxy and prevent epoxy runoff in vertical and overhead joints. 406 is a very strong filler that creates a smooth mixture, ideal for general bonding and filleting. It is also our most versatile filler. Often used in combination with other fillers, it can be used to improve the improve strength, abrasion resistance, and consistency of fairing compounds, resulting in a tougher, smoother surface. Color: off-white. 1.7oz. 5.99 5.5oz. 16.99 10 lbs. 174.99 407 407 Low-Density filler is a blended Microballoon-based filler used primarily to make inexpensive filling and fairing putties which are easy to sand or carve while still being a reasonably good engineering material on a strength-to-weight basis. It can also be used as a thickening additive for bonding veneers and in low-stress structural applications where light weight can be beneficial. Good feathering and won \'t sag. Color: Reddish-Brown. 4oz. 10.99 12oz. 28.75 14 lbs. 272.00 410 410 The ideal low-density filler for creating a light, easily worked fairing compound especially suited for fairing large areas. 410 MICROLIGHT handles well and mixes with greater ease than 407 or Microballoons, and is approximately 30% easier to sand. It is also more economical for large fairing jobs but is not recommended under dark paint or other surfaces subjected to high temperatures. Cures to a light tan color. Do not mix 410 MICROLIGHT filler with polyester or vinylester resins. Microlight will inhibit the cure of polyester or vinylester resins. 2oz. 9.92 5oz. 22.15 4 lbs. 199.99 We sell the full line of West Systems products. Please contact us for other items! West System Epoxy Links: Epoxy User \'s Manual West System Epoxy ***Safety Information*** Please Use Epoxy Safely! Make sure you have protective clothing, gloves, an appropriate respirator and use the product in a well ventilated area. Please, read the safety info. in the links above and follow all manufacturer \'s suggestions! Soller Composites assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of the either, of any materials, product, information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of all products and determine the proper use and suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Soller Composites \'s sole responsibility and/or liability is limited to the replacement of product or refund of the purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",93);arrFiles[9]=new Array(10,"safe.html","16 Oct 2008","**Soller Composites** Safety equip page","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 100% Nitrile Gloves 21 cents/Pair 10.00 for a box of 100 -Easier to grip objects than latex or vinyl gloves -More resistant to punctures -High quality and comfortable 1Pr Gloves Size: Small Med Lrg XLrg We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: 1Box Gloves Size: Small Med Lrg XLrg Tyv ek Suits &amp; Boots Suits - Med, Large, XLarge 8.00 each 1 TyvekSuite Size: Med Lrg XLrg MC. VISA, AX, JCB, Diners Club, and Discover Please contact us! Click here for to learn of other payment option Our online Store uses Paypal What \'s PayPal? Boots: Large, XLarge 2.00/pair 1Pr Tyvek Boots Size: Lrg XLrg Have Questions? P lease contact us! We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping + 2 max. (for shipping materials). We will refund you any shipping over charges when we ship you item(s)! or please call us with a Credit Card Please contact us if you would like to purchase a respirator/mask. Please contact us for help or for other safety equipment Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. Please contact us if you have any questions. Please note that we can not accept returns for used masks, opened cartridges, and/or pre-filters, thank you! ",17);arrFiles[10]=new Array(11,"specialdeals.html","24 Jun 2008","Special Deals","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Special Deals We occasionally run special deals for our valued customers who sign-up to be on our specials deals list. We value your privacy! We never give or sell any email address to anyone or any organization. No one will ever receive emails from us unless it is directly related to a purchase (ex. to communicate your tracking and billing info.), or for an occasional special deal, if (and only if) you sign-up to be on this special deals list. Click Here to: add me to the special Deals List Customers on our Special Deals list receive HUGE discounts periodically that are not offered to anyone else! To be removed from this list please email us by clicking: PleaseNoMoreDeals In-stock specials: none available at this time.... Please contact us to for purchases of the above items Due to the industry-wide carbon shortage, we will be emailing fewer special deals, although we will continue to run them as often as possible. ",5);arrFiles[11]=new Array(12,"samples.html","17 Nov 2009","**Soller Composites** Samples Page","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Samples Sample fabrics below are small pieces (typically no larger than) 2X4. All prices below include shipping (inside the USA). International and other customers -please c ontact us We receive a great number of requests for samples of our products. We are more than happy to provide samples of our custom made and unique composite products. In order to keep our prices as low as possible, we request that you please contribute a few dollars to pay for some of the material cost and shipping. We respectfully request you please keep the number of samples being oprder to a limit of 6 (line) items. Thank you! Choose a fabric : Gold Texalium Red Texelium Texalium/Silver Carbon Fiber Fabric 8.5oz Texalium/Silver Carbon Fiber Fabric 6oz Texalium/Red Carbon Fiber Fabric 6oz Texalium/Black Carbon Fiber Fabric 6oz UNI Carbon Sleeve 9.0oz UNI 4.0oz UNI Biaxial Tape Carbon Sleeve Fiberglass Sleeve Kevlar Sleeve Carbon/Kevlar Sleeve Carbon/Kevlar Fabric Carbon/Fiberglass Sleeve Basalt Sleeves Shrink tubing Zylon Fabric Triaxial Carbon fabric Carbon/Red Fiberglass twill Carbon/Blue Fiberglass twill Carbon/White Fiberglass twill Carbon/Green Fiberglass twill Carbon/Pink Fiberglass twill Carbon/Purple Fiberglass twill Carbon/Orange Fiberglass twill Carbon/Gray Fiberglass twill Carbon/Yellow Fiberglass twill solid colored 2x2 fiberglass twill Ship 1st class mail (Inside USA only)? A ny One Sample (you choose) 1.49 Carbon/ C o l o r e d Fiberglass sleeve sampl e (colors typicaly included are: Black &amp; Red, Orange, Purple, Blue, &amp; Green) 3.99 Other, enter manually: Ship 1st class mail (Inside USA only)? Other Sample Choice, enter manually 1.49 Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLC \'s sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",13);arrFiles[12]=new Array(13,"EpoxyResinChoice.html","28 Oct 2009","fabricchoice","","","Home Page Contact us Choosing the Appropriate Resin Epoxy vs. Vinylester vs. Polyester Resins Jon Soller Soller Composites Copyright 2004 All Rights Reserved I. Introduction There are three main types of Resins used today for use with Carbon Fiber, Fiberglass, and Aramid (Kevlar). These are Epoxy, Vinylester, Polyester Resins. Each has different characteristics and associated costs. Below we briefly discuss each of these resins. Please be aware that all resins &amp; hardeners have their safety related issues. Please research the products you intend to use and fully read the manufacturer’s safety information and follow their recommendations. II. Epoxy resins These are the most expensive of the three resin types, but well worth the cost. Epoxy resins are typically about three times stronger than the next strongest resin type. Epoxy adheres to Carbon Fiber, Fiberglass, and Aramid (Kevlar), very well and forms a virtually leak- proof barrier. Epoxy also adheres to older epoxy and most materials quite well. Most epoxies do have a tendency of yellowing when exposed to water. When purchasing epoxy for applications that have extreme temperature changes or are exposed to water, make sure you purchase an “all weather” epoxy hardener. One example of such a hardener is West System’s 207 Hardener. Note that most epoxies are slightly amber in color. When you apply the typical amount of resin to a composite, that is just enough to wet-out the composite, the epoxy is clear. The exception to this is when you wet-out yellow Kevlar or white colored fiberglass. In these cases you will see the yellow kevlar darken slightly and you will most likely see a very slight yellow tint to a white colored fiberglass. You can buy perfectly clear epoxy resins. West System \'s 207 hardener is now perfectly clear and has UV protection. It is the only epoxy hardene rwe are aware of that has both of these characteristics. Don \'t confuse the yellowing of epoxies over time with the slight amber initial color of most epoxies. There are only about 4 epoxies in the market that will not yellow over time. The West System 207 is the best of them all (that is the reason we sell West System \'s Epoxy). Even for indoor applications, UV will eventually yellow your epoxy. So if you don \'t plan on painting you piece/application and you want your piece to look good and last as long as possible, plan either protecting it with UV coating (such as a UV urethane), and/or use the 207 hardener. III. Vinylester Resins These resins typically have about one third the strength of Epoxy resins. They adhere poorly to Carbon Fiber and Aramid (Kevlar), but can be used for aesthetic applications for these fibers. Vinylester resins are primarily used with fiberglass, but are also commonly used with carbon mostly for cosmetic applications when a polyester clear coat or polyester based gelcoat is needed. This type of resin should not be used with carbon or aramid fabric if strength is a primary requirement. Note that urethane based clear coats can be used with epoxies. IV. Polyester Resins These are the cheapest of all the resins. They have poor bonding capability and should never be used for any structural carbon or aramid work. They typically work well only on fiberglass. One should generally never consider using this resin with structural applications with Carbon Fiber or Aramid. Epoxy Page ",9);arrFiles[13]=new Array(14,"fabricchoice.html","21 Jul 2009","fabricchoice","","","Home Page Contact us Weave Definitions Jon Soller Soller Composites Copyright 2004 All Rights Reserved I. Introduction This paper explains the differences between common weave types, weave densities, and when they are best used. The first sections below briefly explain the weave types, followed by a discussion regarding when each weave type is generally best used. For more information, please contact us at info@sollercomposites.com. II. General Weave Definition Weaves are generally referred &amp; defined by a notation such as: 2X2, 4X4, and 3X1, for example. The first number in this set, for ex. the 3 in 3X1, refers to how many strands are crossed “over” before going “under” the perpendicular strands (in a 90 degree weave). The second number refers to how many strands are crossed “under” before going back “over” the perpendicular strands (in a 90 degree weave). That is, a 3X1 weave would run: over, over, over, under, over, over, over, under, over, over, over, etc. A 1X1 weave would run: over, under, over, under, over, under, etc. III. Plain Weave A Plain weave is defined as a 1X1 weave. Note the weave is over, under, over under, over , under, etc: IV. Twill Weave A Twill weave is defined as a set of identical number of weave both under and over. That is, for example: 2X2, 4X4. Below is a good example of a 2X2 twill weave: V. Harness-Satin Weave A Harness-Satin, sometimes referred to as: Harness, Satin, or Crowfoot, is defined as any number larger than 1, followed by X, and a larger number. That is, a 3X1 Harness-Satin is referred to as a Harness-Satin 4, H4, or 4HS. A 4X1 Harness-Satin is referred to as a Harness-Satin 5 (5HS or H5), and a 7X1 Harness-Satin is referred to as a Harness-Satin 8, H8, or 8HS. In the H4 weave picture below the weave runs: over, over, over, under, over, over, over, under, etc. Of course there are always exceptions. It is possible to weave a Harness-Satin so it looks like/similar to a 45 degree twill. Commonly if this is done, it is as 3X1 weave vs 3X1 weave that appears to be fairly ramdom. In the case where the 3X1weave is woven to look like very similar to a twill, the fabric is commonly refered to a 3X1 twill. To confuse the subject even further, note the black/grey looking 8HS below. Even though it looks simiar to the 45 degree angled look of a twill, an 8HS is never refered to as a 7X1 twill: VI. Choosing the Correct Weave Type Each weave type has its advantages and disadvantages. There is virtually no difference in the strength of the fabric based on it weave. Choose the weave based on asthetics, how complex your curves are, and the weight of the fabric needed for your application. That being said, every time each fiber bends over or under another, that very small bend in the fiber can makes very tiny strength differences. These differences should generally be ingnored and are only mentioned here for accuracy, not for fabric consideration. A plain weave, a 1X1 weave, is the tightest weave. Because the weave is tight, it is the least likely to fray at the ends. A twill weave has that 45 degree, or 3D, look to it, which is so often desired. It is much easier to bend around complex curves than a plain weave, because its weave is looser. Therefore, a 4X4 twill will bend around curves better than a 2X2 twill weave. The looser the fabric, the more likely the fabric will fray at the ends and create spaces in the fabric when bent around complex curves. But a loose fabric will fit around complex curves much better than a tighter weave fabric. A Harness-Satin, bends over complex curves better than either a plain or twill weave. A Harness-Satin almost always has more weaves per inch than a plain or twill weave (defined as &ldquo;pics&rdquo;). So a 17picX17pic has more weaves per inch than a 12picX12pic (Don&rsquo;t [ very important] confuse the difference between the weave definition, such as 2X2, with a pic definition, such as 12picX12pic!) So, because a Harness-Satin has a higher pic count, it will hold together a bit better than a twill weave, when handled carefully. The best 90 degree woven fabric for going around complex curves a Harness-Satin 8 (8HS). A fabric that easy pivots, or can easy change fiber angle will also fit very complex curves. To allow a fabric to change fiber angle easy, it may be necessary to cut or remove the selvage (typically a kevlar or fiberglass thin leno stitch at the very edge of the fabric). Most flat fabric weaves, such as Plain weave, Twills, Harness-Satins, etc. are woven on a machine called a loom. This machine weave at a 90 degree angle. That is, fiber going lengthwise &amp; widthwise. So, in general, if you don&rsquo;t have complex curves and don&rsquo;t care about aesthetics, a plain weave is the best option. If aesthetics are very important, generally a twill weave is selected, but for a sophisticated look a Harness-Stain H7 or H8 is often used. If you have very complex curves, an 8 Harness-Satin is the best choice. VII. 1K, 3K, 6K, what does it mean? The K refers to one thousand individual strands of carbon per fiber bundle. Each stand is much smaller than a human hair. So, if you have 12 weaves/inch (pics/inch), you have 12 fiber bundles per inch, and in each fiber bundle of 3K fabric you have 3000 strands of carbon. A typical 1K fabric is 3.74oz/sq yard; 3K fabric is 5.7oz/sq yrd. Don \'t confuse 3Kx3K with 12X12 in a fabric description. The 3K is the fiber size (fiber bundle size), the 12X12 is the number of weaves/inch in each direction. Please feel free to contact us for more info: Detailed Fabric Page ",17);arrFiles[14]=new Array(15,"MakingShafts.html","3 Aug 2009","Making Shafts","","","Site Map Home Page Contact us Simple and Inexpensive Techniques for Making Carbon Fiber and Composites Shafts Jon Soller Owner Soller Composites original Copyright 2004 updated &amp; Copyrighted 2007 All Rights Reserved Customer comments: ...I must say the method you \'ve outlined on your web site for creating tubes is down right excellent. I had high expectations of this material, and it still has managed to impress me. I. Introduction We are constantly asked how to cheaply make shafts from our carbon fiber and other sleeve material. This brief paper explains simple ways to effectively make Carbon Fiber and Carbon Kevlar shafts of virtually any size. There are many ways to make shafts from composite sleeve materials. This paper focuses on the simplest and most inexpensive techniques we are aware of that produce professional results. Although more advanced techniques are available, the ones discussed here are adequate for professional results. The more advanced techniques are beyond the scope of this paper. II. Safety This paper \'s intent is not to discuss the safety precautions that need to be understood and applied when working with epoxy, Carbon Fiber, fiberglass, and other composites. Please read, research and understand the materials, safe use, and application of such techniques and materials. If you would like more information regarding this, please contact us. We’ll be glad to help you, or point you to appropriate resources regarding these topics. III. Choosing Your Mold or Shaft The simplest molds you can use to make a shaft are copper or PVC tubing available at any hardware store. You will find that PVC piping provides the best and cheapest mold for easily removing your shaft after it cures. Unfortunately, PVC pipes bend very easily. Because of this, their use is limited to very short shafts. Copper water pipes work quite well for applications up to about 5 feet (possibly 6 feet if you are very strong). For very small shafts of less than ¾ inch, try using steel rods as a mold. No matter what you use as a mold, be prepared to hang your shaft vertically while the resin dries so that the shaft remains perfectly straight. IV. Adjusting Your Mold Diameter to Virtually Any Size After you selected your mold “base”, you may find that it is not quite the right size for your application. There are several ways to address this issue: 1) Not very cheap, but you can always add more layers of sleeving material until you reach the appropriate shaft size 2) You can sand down carbon fiber for micro adjustment. 3) You can wrap your mold with any number of substances to thicken it up: a. Plastic (home vapor barrier or painters sheets). Just please don’t use plastic wrap (it is too thin and will stick to epoxy). Tip – if you use plastic, the fewer layers the better -since many layer may warp your final shaft slightly. After wrapping with plastic, pull it tight and tape it off with standard household tape. b. You can carefully apply any number of tapes over top of each other. Be careful to perfectly line-up the edges of each piece of tape as you apply it horizontally down the shaft V. Preparing Your Mold You now need to apply a barrier between your mold and the sleeve. We recommend using a thick plastic: yes again (home vapor barrier or painters sheets). It is important that the sheet be perfectly flat, no creases please! But before you apply your plastic barrier to your mold, you need to apply a lubricant between your mold and the barrier. Silicone spray or baby oil works well for ex., but virtually any lubricant should work. Just please make sure it is non-flammable, and won’t interact with epoxy. Apply the lubricant to both the mold and the “inside” part of the barrier. Wrap the barrier around the mold and secure with one small piece of household tape (in the middle of the mold). If your shaft is large, let \'s say 3ft or more, you can use two small pieces of tape (more about this later). Now simply pull your sleeve over top of your shaft, carefully... You will notice that your barrier seems to be a bit care-free at the ends (not tied down since you only used 1 small piece of tape in the middle…). As you work the sleeve over the mold you can start to pull tight the sleeve, by pulling on the ends and twisting slightly in the middle. This will flatten out your “care-free” barrier ends and will provide you with a nice round shaft. If you decided to tape the barrier edges down with more than 1 small piece of tape, you will probably find that you can’t make your shaft look nice and smooth at this point. Note that you can push epoxy through two layers of light sleeves or 1 layer of heavy sleeves. If you tried to push epoxy through more than this amount, you will likely find that not all of the carbon fibers wet-out. To wet-out more layers during the same cure process, turn the edge of the next layer of sleeve inward and roll this next layer into the mandrel inside out (similar to a rolling a stocking). Now wet out this sleeve as needed. You can use this method to add as many layers as you want to 1 shaft in the same curing process VI. Preparing Your Exterior Shaft Surface If your shaft is 100% carbon fiber, you can sand it down and apply a final coat of all-weather epoxy over it to give the shaft that nice finish. You can also apply a coat of urethane as well. If your shaft is all or part Kevlar, sanding it down will make it quite hairy. That is, it will basically destroy the aesthetics of the shaft. Another option, is to use our special heat-shrink tubing. Don \'t use generic off-the-shelf heat shrink tubing, you will likely find that it will stick to your shaft.... 1) Slip our special flexible composite-grade non-flammable heat shrink tubing over top of your epoxied sleeve. Note: this heat shrink tubing works great around bends too! 2) Use a low temp heat gun (starting in the middle of the shaft/sleeve and working your way to the ends of the shaft). The heat shrink tubing will squeeze out excess epoxy and provide you with that smooth professional finish! 3) After the epoxy dries, use a sharp seam-cutter (from your local fabric store) to remove the shrink tubing or score the heat-shrink tubing with a knife and pull it off the shaft. 4) Sand (if desired) the shaft lightly with 1500 or 2000 grit sand paper for a few seconds, then add your final clear coat (spray all-weather urethane or wipe-on a tiny amount of epoxy - just enough to barely wet the shaft and give it that gorgeous shine [as thin as possible - no weight added here]). Let dry, your done! To purchase this heat shrink tubing go to: /composites/carbon fiber sleeves.html#shrink This makes for a surprisingly easy and nice finish. You can vacuum bag the shaft to achieve a slightly lighter shaft at a great expense. If you have bends in your shaft you will find vacuum bagging extremely difficult. If your shaft is over 6.8 in diameter, our shrink tubing will not be large enough. In this case you generally have a few choices: 1) you can sand the outside surface or leave it rough. You can minimize the epoxy by wrapping a stretchable rubber tube around the shaft, pulling it tight (like when you are tying a shoe lace), then pulling the stretchable rubber tube down the shaft. 2) you can add a light fiberglass sleeve over the outside. Fiberglass turns clear when resin is added to it. The tighter &amp; smoother finish of the fiberglass sleeve can more easily be sanded down than a heavy weave of the carbon sleeve. 3) You can wrap it with plastic (such as mylar or other plastic sheeting). This approach does not minimize the epoxy and can leave an uneven surface. P lease note that you can typically apply two layers of light sleeves at once and still be able to push epoxy through them. If you are using Medium or Heavy sleeves, please only do one layer at a time… Note that it is possible to do many layers of carbon sleeves at once. To do this, for ex., add two layers of light sleeves (dry) onto your mandrel, or one layer of heavy sleeves &amp; wet out the sleeve(s). Now turn you next layers of sleeve(s) inside out and roll them on like a sock on your foot, wet out the layers, and repeat as needed. We have done 15 layers at once using this method. This is the best method we found to minimize epoxy and maximize strength for many layers of sleeving. VII. Curing Your Epoxy If you are not using shrink tubing... many people complain about bubbles when epoxy is drying. Know that drying epoxy is a heat sensitive chemical reaction. Bubbles are produced when too much heat is used and when epoxy dries too quickly. Bubbles are sometime impossible to avoid, but try drying the epoxy in slightly lower temperatures, or sand them off and apply a final thin layer of Urethane (or epoxy). VIII. Removing Your Shaft From the Mold Gently twist the shaft back and forth as you pull it off the mold. It should come off fairly easily. Once the shaft is off the mold, the barrier will stay stuck to the shaft. Twist the barrier with pliers in the same direction until it is removed from the inside of the shaft. If you have a 5ft shaft you may be doing quite a bit of twisting. Don’t try to pull it out without twisting, since you are very likely to break it about 1ft in, making the remaining part of the barrier very difficult to remove. IX. Advanced Topics: Making Bends in Shafts Composite fabrics are soft and ideal for bent and complex shape moldings. The trick with these types of structures is creating and removing the mold. The best solution is usually using a high density foam mold. Such mold can be custom made for you, but are usually reserved for large manufacturing runs (10,000+ pieces). Assuming this is not an option for you, there are several other options: a) you can buy high density foam and create you own mold. If you need to remove the foam afterwards , it usually can be eaten out with acetone. b) you can make you own mold casing and spray liquid foam into you mold casing. c) you can use a flexible vinyl or latex tubing as a mold d) you can use a miter saw to cut 10 degree angle out of a straight shaft, reposition the cut pieces to make a bend, then sand the outside smooth and round e) you can use a pre-exiting flexible or ridged foam mold such as one found in a craft store or sporting good store (such as a wacky noodle) The best foam to use to make such objects is water soluble foam. Wwater soluable foam mold making material is generally available in container of 5 gallons, but not smaller as of this writing. X. Advanced Topics: Very Long and/or Very Large Diameter Shafts If your shaft is over 5 to 6 ft and/or you are working with large daimeter shafts (ex 6+ diameter that is 4ft+ long) the plastic liner technique above becomes impractical. In this case, a much more involved technique can be used (as described here). Using an aluminum shaft (not steel). the shaft can be heated (ex to 150F). after the epoxy cures, cool the part/shaft and the part will slide off. Be make sure your epoxy can handle the higher heat! Note that when using this technique a high grade (high temp) release wax or release spray can be used instead of the plastic liner method, but for best results we generally recommend staying away from the waxes. XI. A Note on Sleeve Fiber Angles At the nominal size, the size the sleeve is specified for (ex. at 3 diameter for a 3 sleeve), the fiber orientation of the sleeve is at a 45 degree angle. This is ideal for twisting applications, cosmetic applications, and for holding the shaft uniformly together while under stress. if the shaft is to be used as a push pole, then a fiber orientation along the length of the shaft is ideal. For stresses that would effectively try to break a long shaft in 1/2 (such as breaking a stick over you knee), you also want a fiber orientation along the length of the shaft. All this being said, keep in mind that rarely does one have stresses just in one direction. For ex., even with a push pole using a 45 degree weave over a UNI sleeve will help keep the UNI sleeve fiber contained and will typically create a stronger shaft. Also, one might consider using a larger sleeve and pulling it down so the fiber angles are more along the length of the shaft. For ex. in a kayak paddle shft that is 1.2 in diameter, using a 2 sleeve typically provides for a stronger shaft than a 1.25 sleeve, because of the fiber angle being more along the length of the shaft. Expanding the sleeve beyond it nominal size (ex. using a 2 sleeve on a 2.2 shaft, will create better hoop strength (such as if you would stand on the shaft laying on the floor) . Rarely is this type of strength beneficial. Determine where your stresses will be in your application, then choose wisely the sleeve size &amp; thivkness you need for your application. XII. Final words You will find these techniques to be simple, very cheap and effective. If you have questions, please don’t hesitate to contact us. We often times find our customers find creative and unique ways to resolve problems. If you find or develop techniques that you think we or others can use, please let us know -we’d love to hear form you! Sleeve Page ",29);arrFiles[15]=new Array(16,"FabricsTechniques.html","17 Apr 2008","Common Techniques for Laminating Composite Fabrics","","","Common Methods for Laminating Composite Fabrics Jon Soller Soller Composites Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved Introduction There are four basic methods for laminating composite fabrics. This paper will discuss, in simple terms, these techniques, giving an overview of each method.  These methods include overlay, vacuum bagging, pressure molds, and a few hybrid methods. Choice of fabrics Choosing a fabric type is mostly dependant on two factors – weave type and thickness.  Determining the weave type is based upon your aesthetic and conformability requirements.  The most common fabric chosen for aesthetic applications is typically a 3K 2x2 twill for carbon fabric applications.  This fabric provides the most dramatic look of all weave types.  For a more sophisticated look, a harness satin H8 or possibly harness satin H4 is sometimes used.  For maximum conformability, a harness satin fabric is the most flexible of all the fabric weaves.  Which harness satin (ex. 4 vs. 8) conforms the best to complex curves is dependent upon the specific fabric.  The next most flexible fabric is generally a twill weave (note that a 4x4 twill will be more flexible than a 2x2).  The least conforming fabric is a plain weave.  It is no accident that the harness satin is the loosest of all weaves, while the plain weave is the tightest of all weaves. Therefore you can generally conclude that the looser the fabric weave, the more conforming it will be to complex curves and the more easily it frays (at the edges), while the tighter the fabric weave, the less conforming to complex curves, but it is likely to fray the least amount of all the weaves at the edges.  What thickness you need in a particular fabric is dependent on your application.  For cosmetic purposes using carbon fiber fabric, a 3K carbon is often an ideal choice.  For structural applications, the most cost effective solution is to use the thickest possible fabric.  Thicker fabrics are cheaper per pound than multiple layers of thinner fabrics, although thinner fabrics will generally conform better to complex curves than thicker fabrics.  For more information regarding choosing the correct fabric, please see our paper “Weave Definitions” at: www.solarcomposites.com/fabricchoice.html. The Overlay Method The overlay method is the simplest of all the laminating methods.  Generally it involves finding an existing piece and sanding it lightly, then the composite fabric is laid over the top of this existing piece, and resin is applied.  Finishing such a piece using the overlay method generally involves one of two techniques.  The first is sanding and/or buffing the finished overlay composite piece to a shine.  The second option is to sand the piece smooth, then apply a final coat of resin or add a clear coat, typically of urethane for epoxy, or a polyester clear coat for a polyester based resin.  Sanding into carbon fiber in order to smooth the surface is commonly not recommended since it can destroy the cosmetic appearance.  In order to provide a smooth outer layer without cutting into the carbon fiber outer layer, some add a final layer of fiberglass since all fiberglass turns clear when resin is added to it, and one can sand into the fiberglass to make a smooth surface without touching the underlying carbon material.  The main advantage of using the overlay technique is its simplicity.   The overlay method is commonly used when one custom piece needs to be made, or a small number of custom pieces need to be made.  The main disadvantage of using the overlay technique is that results can be inconsistent and one often needs to be at least somewhat “crafty” in order to be able to create professional looking pieces.  Vacuum Bagging Vacuum bagging is by far the most complex and expensive of all the methods, but usually results in the best final product (after a well designed mold and your processes are well established).  The first step in vacuum bagging is to create a perfectly designed reverse mold of the final piece which you intend to make.  This mold can be made out of virtually any material, anything from silicon rubber molds to composite or even water soluble materials.  The second step involves laying your composite fabric(s) into your newly created mold, then applying either a release fabric for fairly flat products or a peel-ply for complex and curvy applications.  A release fabric is typically a plain weave nylon treated fabric that allow resin to pass through it, but the release fabric itself will not stick to the composite product.  A peel-ply is a stretchable rubber like membrane with small holes space throughout the membrane, allowing resin to be sucked through those holes.  Behind the peel-ply or release fabric you place a breather fabric.  It often resembles a baby’s blanket and may even be called that.  The purpose of the breather fabric is to absorb the excess epoxy being pulled through the release fabric or peel-ply.  Behind the breather fabric is the vacuum bag itself.  This acts as a permanent barrier and helps create an airtight chamber so that the resin can be sucked away from the product.  Sealing the bag to the mold requires a special sticky tape.  This tape provide an airtight seal between the mold and the vacuum bag itself.  This tape is commonly referred to as sealant tape.  If producing large numbers of identical units, such as if you intend to go into production making one specific piece or product, vacuum bagging is an ideal method.  The disadvantages of using a vacuum bagging method are that it often requires a great deal of effort to create a perfect mold; it also often requires adjusting of the vacuum bag line(s) and possibly adjusting the individual suction of each line.  Because of this, it is common to go through at least three to five pieces until you perfect your product and are ready to go into production.  Therefore this method is generally not recommended if your intention is to create only a few specific pieces.  Pressure Molds Pressure molds provide the advantages of vacuum bagging without necessarily the expense.  Pressure molds are ideal for flat applications.  The technique involves creating a male and female mold and sandwiching your composite material between them, thereby pressing the two molds together to create your final product.  For flat applications, one can use materials for molds that are as simple as two pieces of flat lexicon  (plexi-glass) by treating each side of the plexi-glass with a release agent prior to inserting the composite fabric (with resin).  One can therefore quickly and easily create perfect and flat composite pieces.  Complex products can also be made by creating both male and female molds that perfectly fit inside each other.  The main disadvantage of pressure molds for complex pieces is the complexity of making the molds themselves.  The main advantage is the elimination of all the vacuum bagging supplies to create your product.  The Hybrid Methods This is a cross between the overlay method and vacuum bagging.  This involves creating a table with holes in it, similar to a peg board, laying your overlay piece over the top of this table, applying your composite fabric, and laying a stretchable plastic over the top of the composite.  Finally one either uses vacuum suction, to suck the plastic down onto the piece or simply stretches the plastic over the top of the piece.  In this method one also treats the plastic with a release agent prior to use.  The main advantage of this method is its simplicity.  This technique works quite well for products which are fairly flat, and/or a convex shape.  For products that have complex curves or holes in their center, you will find that the plastic will not conform well to the complex shapes, therefore this method has limited use but is ideal for some applications.  Note the use of a treated stretchable plastic sheeting  used in this method can also be used in the overlay method mentioned above with the potential for exceptional results. Another option for the hybrid method is to use a tubular vac bag. This eliminates the need for the table mentioned above.  The ends of the tubular vacuum bag can then be sealed either with vacuum bagging sealant tape or by heat sealing the two halves together similar to the way common vacuum food storage bag are sealed. Conclusion Choosing the right technique depends on the number of identical products you intend to make, how crafty you are, how much time you intend to invest (up front), and how sensitive you may be to the cost of producing your pieces.  For small number of products, the overlay or hybrid methods are typically desired.  For larger numbers of products, typically the hybrid or vacuum bagging is the most effective.  ",11);arrFiles[16]=new Array(17,"PrePregs.html","23 Jan 2008","fabricchoice","","","Home Page Contact us Prepreg Fabrics Jon Soller Soller Composites Copyright 2008 All Rights Reserved I. Introduction When building very large objects, such as an airplane wing, it no longer becomes possible to hand lay epoxy. In these cases pre-impregnated carbon fabrics are used (prepregs). Since the epoxy resin &amp; hardener must be combined in prepreg fabrics, typically a temperature threshold must be met in order for the resin to cure (ex. 300 Degrees F). II. Advantages of Prepregs a aiiiia The lack of need to mix the epoxy and the consistence amount of resin per sq area are the primary advantage of pre-pregging. Epoxy resins are also available that can be used specifically tailored for very large applications. III. Disavanatages of Prepregs iiiiiiiiiiii Prepregs typically must be refrigerated until they are used. They are almost always sold only in full rolls. They cost much more than buying epoxy and hand laying the resin. They typically have a short shelf life (6 months is common). IV. Conclusion Prepregs should only be used when they are needed. If you can get by without prepregs, typically this is your best option. Epoxy Page ",6);arrFiles[17]=new Array(18,"CommonEpoxyIssues.html","23 Jul 2007","fabricchoice","","","Download this Document now by clicking here Home Page Contact us Resolving Common Epoxy Issues &amp; Problems Jon Soller Soller Composites Copyright 2005 All Rights Reserved I. Introduction Working with epoxy is fairly straight forward, although there are occasionally a few issues one can run into. This paper briefly describes some of the common problems people have asked us about, and how to resolve them under most circumstances. Please be aware that all resins &amp; hardeners have their safety related issues. Please research the products you intend to use and fully read the manufacturer’s safety information and follow their recommendations. This paper is not intended to explain how to use epoxy, only as a guide of how to correct common problems when using epoxy. Please read carefully all manufacturers instructions and follow them carefully. II. Types of Epoxy Epoxies typically come as 2 parts (Resin and Hardener). Cheaper epoxies are often either thick and more difficult to apply easily to composite fabrics or will yellow when exposed to water, moisture, sun, or excessive heat (hereafter referred to as excessive conditions). Because of these issues, and the high cost and time it takes to make composite products, we only use top-of-the-line epoxy. After extensive testing and research, we found the West Systems epoxy to be the best epoxy in the market. Only 4 other epoxy brands did not yellow under the circumstances described above (excessive conditions). Nevertheless, two part epoxy resins can cure at different rates, based typically on the hardener. For example, West System \'s Hardener comes in 205 (Fast), 206 (moderate), 209 (very slow). They also make the 207 which a moderate cure hardener, but this hardener does not yellow (as discussed above). May people have asked for totally, 100%, clear epoxies. The only such epoxy we have ever seen is with 5 minute hardeners (which we also sell). Unfortunately, these epoxies will yellow when exposed to these excessive conditions.. III. Applying Epoxy Epoxy should always be applied very thinly (similar thickness as if you were applying sun-tan lotion [on your composite application]), not thickly like peanut butter. The only purpose of epoxy is to wet-out the composite. That is, adding more or additional layers of epoxy will only add weight to your product, it will not add any additional strength! Always buy and use an auto-measure pump kit. They are less than 9, and they will make your life much easier as well as provide you accurate measurements every time. Incorrect amounts of resin &amp; hardener can cause incomplete curing and/or too much heat build-up. Incomplete curing can cause a weaker final product as well as yellowing of the epoxy. Excessive heat build-up can cause smoking or even fire in extreme cases. IV. Common Problems and Resolutions Below are some common problems people have asked us how to resolve. If you need further information, please contact us: Epoxy turned cloudy when cured: This is commonly caused by too much moisture either in the air or moisture has gotten into the epoxy mixture. We have also seen this when the epoxy is heated with a heat gun and dried too quickly. Over mixing or overworking the epoxy may cause this as well. Epoxy gets very hot: This is caused by either making too big of a pot (too much resin &amp; hardener being mixed together at once, or too much hardener for the resin amount. Make sure your ratios of resin and hardener are correct. You can also mix this in a container that has more surface area (bigger container). Adding more surface area to the epoxy while mixing will allow for the mixture to stay cooler. The epoxy should get warm, but never hot. Bubbles form on the cured epoxy: A few bubbles are normal. This can be avoided by covering the piece with thick plastic, peel-ply, or release fabric. Too many bubbles are commonly caused from the epoxy curing too quickly. Try curing at lower temperatures, or switch to a lower temperature hardener. You can also break the bubbles as the form with a roller or a spreader. Epoxy yellows after cured when exposed to water, moisture, excessive heat, or sun: Try using the 207 Hardener, and add a clear coat with UV protection (such as a clear outdoor urethane) . Can \'t get that professional shiny look: Spray the final piece with a urethane, enamel, or other clear coats. Use 3-6 very very thin coats (to avoid sagging and dripping). . If you have other problem, please feel free to contact us. We will be glad to help you! Epoxy Page ",18);arrFiles[18]=new Array(19,"composites/special.html","24 Jun 2008","* Soller Composites * Carbon Fiber Fabric","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Custom Payment Amount Screen Enter Special amount to be added to cart -&gt; : Please enter a short note or comment here about the amount entered: We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping! We will refund you any over-shipping charges when we ship you item(s)! Also feel free to email us your order and we will be glad to send you a custom link with the correct shipping. Or call us with a credit card and we will only charge your card the correct amount after we ship your item(s). Thank you! Customer Comments: -...This seller is simply the best. Excellent product and a top notch dealer -...I got your carbon, and beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful...Thanks -... Thanks again for your excellent customer service... -... Excellent product. Superb communication... -...great stuff, super fast ship -...thanks guys nice product, carbon fiber was beautiful shipping was great thanks... -... Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction.. -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again -...As promised and more -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",22);arrFiles[19]=new Array(20,"MSDS.html","1 Jun 2009","MSDS info","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheets) General Safety Info &amp; Terms (Click Here) Epoxy Related Data Sheets 105 Resin **More Epoxy Safety info Click Here** 205 Hardener 206 Hardener 207 Hardener 209 Hardener Graphite Powder Epoxy Fillers Epoxy Colorants Release spray/sealer Spray Sealer Carbon Fiber Raw Materials Carbon Fiber Fabric Carbon Fiber, Carbon/aramid (Kevlar), Fiberglass, &amp; Basalt Sleeving Fiberglass Fabrics &amp; Materials Basalt Fabrics &amp; Materials Composite Heat Shrink Tubing Please contact us with any questions, if you would like more information, or for other MSDS info. ",7);arrFiles[20]=new Array(21,"CustomersProducts.html","24 Nov 2009","**Soller Composites**Customer Showcase","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Customer \'s Product Showcase Colored prosthetic sleeving courtesy of: Jim Skardoutos C/Fab LIMBCRAFTER@comcast.net click here to see colored hybrid sleeving Courtesy of Jon Tomassi Courtesy of www.illusion-atc.com ...the entire 2009 World Championship Relay Team (Jordan Malone (zylon), Apolo Anton Ohno (zylon), JR Celski and Ryan Bedford) was wearing your carbon on their finger tips. Also Jeff Simon (carbon helmet), Travis Jayner, Kimberly Derrick (zylon), Katherine Reutter, Alyson Dudek, Jessica Smith, and Lana Ghering are also wearing the tips. That \'s almost all of the National team plus most of the other development teams here as well. Courtesy of: Jordan Malone USSpeedskating 2009 World Champion Custom Shift Boot Courtesy of Soller Composites ....................................................................... Trekking Pole Courtesy of www.extremepoles.com Colored Carbon/Pink Fiberglass Car Interior by http://www.myspace.com/concepts2reality By Sean Porter http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=755244 Courtesy of Kevin Lord Courtesy Of Chava Balas composite-concepts.com Courtesy Of: Brian Carbon briancarbon@gmail.com Sealed fibers Carbon fiber Boot Shift Courtesy Of: Robert Ehrmann, Aerospace Engineering Human Powered Vehicle Club, President 2008-2009 California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo Send us your photos to include in our customer showcase! Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",10);arrFiles[21]=new Array(22,"comments.html","15 Jul 2009","**Soller Composites** Customer Comments","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 Customer Comments &amp; Feedback -...I got your carbon, and beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful. ...Thanks!... -...Service is impecable...Thanks... -... Excellent product. Superb communication... -... Soller Composites Excellent Service!!! WOW! ....... Ya know. I \'ve always thought that Soller has some sort of telepathic thing going.. Almost every ....... time, I order in the morning and the product is waiting for me... ...... Soller Composites Excellent Service!!! WOW! ...... Not only that but theres usually a refund via PP for overshipping thats always sweet. Jon Rocks. ..... Ya know. I \'ve always thought that Soller has some sort... -...great stuff, super fast ship -...thanks guys nice product, carbon fiber was beautiful shipping was great thanks... -... Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction... -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...Quick shipping. Well packaged. My new source for carbon fiber -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again ",10);arrFiles[22]=new Array(23,"Privacy.html","17 Jan 2007","MSDS info","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 Our Privacy Policy Your privacy is our priority (see below) ! All info. regarding your order, including but not limited to your: email address, shipping address, personal info, and all other info. you may give to us directly or indirectly is considered strictly confidential. We never sell, or pass on any info. we receive from you to anyone, unless required to by court order! Reasonable and obvious exceptions to this do exist. For ex.: if you provide us credit card info, we obviously need to provide this to our merchant system in order to charge your credit card... If you email us complements about our products and/or services, we reserve the right to publish your comments only on our web page, we would never publish names, addresses, other identifiable info, etc. unless you specifically request it. If you have further questions, please contact us. ",3);arrFiles[23]=new Array(24,"light-sleeves-sock.html","4 Jan 2009","Sleeve Specs","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Carbon/Kevlar Natural Color This is an example of how these sleeves can expand from their minimum to maximum application size. Note that the length of the sleeve increases by about 1/3 when going from the maximum width of the sleeve to the minimum width. Carbon/Fiberglass Sleeving 100% Carbon Fiber Sleeves (top) 100% Kevlar Sleeves (above) Red&amp; Black (above) 100% Fiberglass Sleeeves (above left), White Carbon/Fiberglass Sleeving (above center), Basalt (above right) Other colors are available, please contact us for more info. Specs: Our Carbon Sleeves are Aerospace grade 34Msi Modulus (Stiffness) 640ksi Tinsile Strength (Breaking Stength) 100% Carbon Fiber Sleeve Detailed Specs Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size from (in) Est. Diameter size to (in) Est. Circum from (in) Est. Circum to (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 0.25 0.64 Light 0.09 0.29 0.28 0.91 0.013 0.33 8.3 281 265.2 0.5 1.28 Light 0.14 0.6 0.45 1.8 0.013 0.33 8.3 281 132.6 0.75 1.91 Light 0.29 0.9 0.9 2.8 0.013 0.33 8.9 301 82.9 1 2.55 Light 0.36 1.2 1.14 3.77 0.012 0.3 8.3 281 66.3 1.5 3.82 Light 0.6 1.75 1.9 5.5 0.013 0.33 8.3 281 44.2 1.5 3.82 Heavy 0.76 1.75 2.4 5.5 0.030 0.76 19.9 675 18.4 2 5.09 Light 0.76 2.23 2.4 7 0.011 0.28 7.5 254 36.8 2.5 6.36 Medium 1.02 2.93 3.2 9.2 0.018 0.46 11.9 403 18.4 2.5 6.36 Heavy 1.18 2.93 3.7 9.2 0.03 0.76 19.9 674 11 3 7.63 Heavy 1.46 3.5 4.6 11 0.03 0.76 19.9 674 9.2 4 10.17 Heavy 1.56 4.46 4.9 14 0.022 0.56 15.1 511 9.1 5 12.71 Heavy 1.85 5.73 5.8 18 0.021 0.53 14.4 488 7.6 6 15.25 Heavy 2.45 7.26 7.7 22.8 0.021 0.53 14.5 491 6.3 8 20.33 Heavy 2.86 9.68 9 30.4 0.021 0.53 14.2 481 4.8 10 25.41 Heavy 3.82 12.70 12 47 0.02 0.51 14.1 477 3.9 12 30.49 Heavy 3.98 14.00 12.5 48 0.02 0.51 13.9 471 3.3 5 0% Carbon Fiber 50% Kevlar Sleeve Detailed Specs Please see carbon above and Kevlar below for fiber specs Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size from (in) Est. Diameter size to (in) Est. Circum from (in) Est. Circum to (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 0.5 1.28 Light 0.14 0.6 0.45 1.8 0.012 0.3 7.5 254 146.8 1 2.55 Light 0.36 1.2 1.14 3 0.012 0.3 7.5 254 73.4 1.5 3.82 Light 0.6 1.75 1.2 5 0.012 0.3 7.5 254 48.9 2 5.09 Light 0.76 2.23 2.4 7 0.011 0.28 6.7 227 40.8 2.5 6.36 Medium 1.02 2.93 3.2 9.2 0.018 0.46 10.8 366 20.4 3 7.63 Medium 1.46 3.5 4.6 11 0.03 0.76 10.7 362 17.1 5 0% Carbon Fiber 50% Fiberglass (Eglass) Sleeve Detailed Specs Please see carbon &amp; fiberglass below for specs Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size from (in) Est. Diameter size to (in) Est. Circum from (in) Est. Circum to (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 0.5 1.28 Light 0.14 0.6 0.45 1.8 0.012 0.3 10.0 338 110.5 1 2.55 Light 0.36 1.2 1.14 3 0.012 0.3 10.0 338 55.2 1.5 3.82 Light 0.6 1.75 1.2 5 0.012 0.3 10.0 338 36.8 2 5.09 Light 0.76 2.23 2.4 7 0.011 0.28 9.0 304 30.7 2.5 6.36 Medium 1.02 2.93 3.2 9.2 0.018 0.46 14.3 485 14.3 3 7.63 Medium 1.46 3.5 4.6 11 0.03 0.76 14.2 483 14.2 4 10.16 Light 1.5 4.9 4.8 15.4 0.010 0.25 8.4 284 16.2 100% Kevlar (Aramid) Sleeve Detailed Specs Kevlar 49 or Twaron 2200 (generic Kevlar) is used Material Kevlar&reg; 49 Twaron&reg; 2200 Type 965 1610 Linear Density den 1420 1548 dtex 1578 1720 Tenacity gpd 24 24 MPa 3050 3017 Breaking Strength lbs 75 81 Modulus GPa 119 105 Elongation at Break (%) 2.45 2.7 Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size From (in) Est. Diameter size To (in) Est. Circum From (in) Est. Circum To (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 0.25 0.64 Light 0.09 0.3 0.28 0.91 0.012 0.3 6.6 223 333.5 0.5 1.28 Light 0.14 0.6 0.45 1.8 0.012 0.3 6.6 223 166.7 0.75 1.91 Light 0.29 0.9 0.9 2.4 0.011 0.28 6.2 210 119.1 1 2.55 Light 0.36 1.2 1.14 3 0.012 0.3 6.6 223 83.4 1.5 3.82 Light 0.6 1.75 1.2 5 0.012 0.3 6.6 223 55.6 2 5.09 Light 0.76 2.23 2.4 7 0.011 0.28 5.9 200 46.3 2.5 6.63 Med 1.02 2.93 3.2 9.2 0.018 0.46 9.5 322 23.2 3 7.63 Heavy 1.46 3.5 4.6 11 0.029 0.74 15.8 535 11.6 100% Fiberglass Sleeve Detailed Specs Fiberglass is Eglass Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size from (in) Est. Diameter size to (in) Est. Circum from (in) Est. Circum to (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 0.25 0.64 Light 0.09 0.29 0.28 0.91 0.012 0.3 11.5 389 265.2 0.5 1.28 Light 0.14 0.6 0.45 1.8 0.012 0.3 11.5 389 132.6 0.5 1.28 Heavy 0.19 0.54 0.60 1.7 0.028 0.71 27.7 938 39.8 0.75 1.91 Light 0.29 0.9 0.90 2.4 0.013 0.33 12.3 416 82.9 1 2.55 Light 0.36 1.2 1.14 3 0.012 0.3 11.5 389 66.3 1 2.55 Heavy 0.51 1.1 1.6 3 0.031 0.79 30.0 10.16 18.4 2 5.09 Light 0.76 2.23 2.4 7 0.011 0.28 10.4 352 36.8 2 5.09 Heavy 0.83 2.10 2.6 7 0.028 0.71 27.7 938 9.9 3 7.63 Light 1.46 3.5 4.6 11 0.011 0.28 10 339 9.2 3 7.63 Heavy 1.53 3.18 4.8 10 0.028 0.71 27.7 938 6.6 4 10.17 Light 1.56 4.46 4.9 14 0.011 0.28 9.8 332 9.1 4 10.17 Heavy 1.18 4.14 5.7 13 0.026 0.66 24.8 840 5.5 5 12.71 Light 1.85 5.73 5.8 18 0.011 0.28 9.7 328 7.6 5 12.71 Heavy 2.16 5.41 6 .8 17 0.025 0.64 24.0 813 4.6 6 15.25 Light 2.45 7.26 7.7 22.8 0.011 0.28 9.6 325 6.3 7 17.79 Heavy 2.83 8.50 8.9 26.7 0.023 0.58 22.4 758 3.5 9 22.87 Heavy 3.98 11.0 12.5 34.5 0.023 0.58 21.5 728 2.8 Basalt Sleeve Detailed Specs Diameter (in.) Diameter (cm) Type Est. Diameter size from (in) Est. Diameter size to (in) Est. Circum from (in) Est. Circum to (in) Thickness (in) Thickness (mm) Weight oz/yd sq Weight g/m sq Approx Ft/lb 2.0 5.08 Med 0.65 2.6 1.95 7.8 0.022 0.56 23 1189 11.9 4.0 10.16 Med 0.91 5.15 2.85 16.2 0.011 0.28 9.9 336 15 Sleeve Temperature Specs Carbon Fiber 600F Kevlar 250-350F Fiberglass Holds 75% of tinsility at 650, softens at 1350F Basalt 1800F Zylon 1250F Please contact us for more info. Circumference to Diameter Conversion tool: Circumference: &lt; - &gt; Diameter Home Page Contact Us T o Sleeve Pricing Page ",253);arrFiles[24]=new Array(25,"refund.html","4 Dec 2009","Refund info","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Our Return Policy We are 100% committed to customer satisfaction! We very rarely have requests for returns. Nevertheless, below are our general guidelines. Please contact us if you have any issue with any product we sell. We will be more than happy to work with you! Product Returns: We will gladly provide (excluding shipping related costs) either (your choice): 1) full store credit for any returned item received within 90 days of purchased ; or 2) a refund (-a 10% restocking fee applies to all returns within 60 days of purchase, or -for items received between 60 &amp; 90 days from purchase date, we will gladly offer you store credit) Custom Made or Cut Products/Fabrics: Clearly it is difficult to resell custom made, colored, or cut products and/or fabrics. -Colored fiberglass products can not be refunded (they are custom colored to your selected size, type and color)- very sorry -Custom cut fabrics under 5 yards are generally not resalable and therefore are not refundable. -a 20% restocking fee will apply to all custom cut fabrics under 10 yards -a 15% restocking fee will apply to all custom cut fabrics over10 yards -a 10% restocking fee will apply to full rolls (100yards+) Special/Custom Ordered Items: Items that are custom ordered, or items specifically ordered in large quantities (well over quantities we normally stock) are generally not returnable, although we may be able to sell your items for you . Please contact us to discuss these options. Deposits are not refundable unless otherwise specified in writing. Cost of shipping, shipping insurance, shipping materials, brokerage fees, customs fees, wire transfer fees &amp; or return shipping can not be refunded, sorry. All returned items must be received in unused, undamaged, and resalable condition In cases where 1) shipping is included in the product price, or 2) special discount(s) on shipping are provided, and a product or part thereof is returned, the actual shipping, material, and other related costs will not be refundable. Undeliverable Package(s) Policy: Soller Composites is not responsible for return, re-shipping, or related costs for packages returned not due to the fault of Soller Composites. If after 30 days of such return(s), and the package(s) have not been successfully delivered, the customer will be refunded according to our refund policy. We encourage our customers to ship via carriers who offer package tracking, include a phone number when ordering and watch the tracking progress in order to resolve any potential deliver issues before packages are returned. Please note that carriers typically will not insure package on return routes. In the unlikely case of a returned package, not due to the fault of Soller Composites: 1) if the package(s) becomes damaged/lost in route, Soller Composites can not be responsible for such damage. 2) return shipping cost both to Soller Composites, reshipping cost to the customer, and repacking materials costs are the resposibilty of our customer. Under all circumstances, our customers takes ownership of all products once those product(s) leave our facility. If you have an issue with any of these guidelines, please contact us . We are always happy to work with our customers! ",10);arrFiles[25]=new Array(26,"Shipping.html","21 Nov 2009","**Soller Composites** Shipping Page","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Our Shipping Policy We only charge our customers our actual shipping costs + our actual shipping materials costs. How we Ship: We usually ship USPS (United State Postal Service) Priority Mail or UPS inside the continental USA. We may use other carriers upon request. We don \'t ship Parcel Post (inside the USA) or Surface Mail (outside the USA) unless requested by our customer. These delivery methods often times take weeks for delivery. For freight (large shipments on pallets) we currently have contracts with 8 freight carriers and typically ship cheapest way unless otherwise requested. Please note that we are a daily pickup for UPS &amp; the USA Postal System. If you choose another carrier, it may take an extra day for them to pick-up your package. If you have an account with a carrier, and want us to bill to your account, we are more than happy to do this for you! We always email our customers the shipping carrier \'s tracking info. If you don \'t get this info from us, we probably don \'t have your correct email address - so please email us and we will be glad to forward it to your correct email account. USA insured packages: We generally insure all shipment to the actual cost paid, unless specifically requested otherwise by our customer . Please note that UPS shipments are insured up to 100.00 at no additional cost). If a shipment is split up into different boxes or uses different carriers, each box content will be fully insured, unless specified differently by the customer. All packages inside the USA are shipped with Delivery Confirmation. This is a free service we receive (via a contract) from the USPS (United State Postal Service) and standard service via UPS. We always email each customer \'s tracking and delivery confirmation info. as soon as we ship your package. Signature Confirmation: All shipment worth over 250.00 will require signature confirmation. Note that this is a free service from UPS for business customers. Credit card orders must be shipped to the credit card billing address or a verified residential address of the credit card holder (or business address if the card is a company card). Online customers may select Signature Confirmation when checking out for order less than 250.00 (other customers may request Signature Confirmation), otherwise our standard policy will apply. International : We ship to countries allowed by USA customs. Please look below for a complete Shipping list of countries that we ship our fabrics to. Brokerage fees, customs fees, duty fees, import fees, import license fees, (etc.) are the sole responsibility of the buyer. These fees are typically due when you receive the package or according to your country \'s laws. International insurance may not be possible, and we always buy international insurance unless otherwise requested by our customer. We do not sell to anyone who intends to ship to a country not in this list. Shipping to Canada: Most of our Canadian customers prefer we ship USPS and not UPS. This is because the UPS brokerage fees are MUCH higher than customs charges when sent through USPS. Note that epoxy can not be send via USPS. Orders 20.00 and under typically are not charged a customs fee (according to our understanding). All actual fees are passed directly to our customers. In the very unlikely case of lost or damaged package(s), or package(s) delivered to the wrong address due to the fault/negligence of the carrier, this will be covered by the carrier \'s insurance (if and as defined by that insurance and any conclusion of the carrier or it representatives during any investigation), unless no insurance is requested by our customer. Stolen packages after delivery is not the responsibility of the carrier or Soller Composites, LLC. Customers concerned about possible theft are strongly encouraged to request Signature Confirmation. Soller Composites, LLC does not insure packages itself, it merely purchases insurance for its customers if as requested by its customer(s). In the very unlikely case of an insurance claim, Soller Composites, LLC will work with our customer &amp; the carrier regarding that claim. Soller Composites, LLC does not refund money or provide credit(s) simply because a claim is initiated. If Soller Composites, LLC receives money due to a claim, all such money will be forwarded to the customer without delay. Under no circumstances is Soller Composites, LLC responsible for lost or stolen packages after a delivery has been made. Under all circumstances, our customer takes ownership of all products once those product(s) leave our facility. Exporting of Composite Fabrics: The Exporting of Composite fabrics outside the USA is restricted by the USA federal government. Soller Composites, LLC does not authorize our customers to resale or export any of its products without express written permission. Exporting of our product outside the USA may be prohibited by USA export regulation, depending on location and other factors. Please contact us for more info, if/as needed. Please do not ask us to ship to a PO box or address that automatically forwards to a country not in our list below. We work hard to exceed our customer \'s expectations. If we can help you in any way, please let us know! The following is a list of countries that we will ship our products to (some restriction do apply, depending on the country, please contact us for more info): Australia Germany New Zealand United Kingdom Austria Greece Norway USA Belgium Hungry Poland Ireland Portugal Bulgaria Italy Romania Canada Japan Slovakia Czech Republic Korea, South Slovenia Denmark Latvia Spain Finland Luxembourg Sweden France Netherlands Switzerland Please understand that we can not ship to anyone who intends to ship our products to countries that are not in this list. We do not authorize the resale of our products without our written permission, since we need to insure USA export regulations are followed. Thank you! We ship our fiberglass products to most countries world-wide! Click here to see our fiberglass sleeves Your country does NOT need to be in the list above for us to ship fiberglass to you! (some restrictions do apply). ",35);arrFiles[26]=new Array(27,"payment1.html","8 Dec 2008","Payment Info","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Payment Options Option #1 We are happy to process your credit card over the phone. Please contact us! We accept the following credit cards: Option #2 Our On-line Store offers secure payment over the Internet via: PayPal is an Online direct payment method that allows people to pay directly via a bank account or Credit Card. PayPal allows payment via the following credit cards: Option #3 You may send online payments to us directly via Paypal. To do this log-on to Paypal and send money to: information@solarcomposites.com Option #4 You may also FAX us your order 1 815 642 9593 with: 1) your credit card #, exp date, 3digit ID code (on back of card for MC, VISA, Discover; 4 digit code on front of AX), 2) credit card billing address, and 3) your shipping address, name, &amp; if the address is a residence or business Option #5 We gladly accept personal checks, money orders, bank checks, or Certified Checks. Please make them payable to: Soller Composites and mail them to: Soller Composites, LLC 87 Hill Rd Franklin NH 03235 Please understand that bounced checks are subject to a 35.00 recovery fee. Option #6 We are happy to receive wire transfers. Please contact us for specific bank info. Please add 5.00 for orders under 1000.00; please add 15.00 for orders under 500.00 Customers are responsible for their bank fees (that is, please do not subtract your bank fees from wired amount) Option #7 We do accept POs from USA government agencies and our customers who already have a history of PO transactions with us. We no longer accept POs from corporations, universities, private businesses, or individuals, sorry. Option #8 We are always happy to accept cash (USA or Canadian). We offer a 5% discount for cash transactions (in USA dollars) . Option #9 We accept payments sent via Western Union. Please email or FAX us the following info: 1) -The Wetern Union Money Transfer Control Number (MTCN) 2) Your First &amp; Last Name 3) Your complete Shipping Address 4) An email address where we can send you your shipping &amp; tracking info 5) Please email or Fax us your order We are happy to offer COD (cash on delivery) shipments to our existing COD customers. We no longer offer COD as payment otherwise. If you have questions, please Contact Us! ",16);arrFiles[27]=new Array(28,"sitemap_files/filelist.xml","22 Jun 2005","filelist.xml","","","",1);arrFiles[28]=new Array(29,"composites/carbon%20fiber%20fabric.html","30 Nov 2007","* Soller Composites * Carbon Fiber Fabric","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 a Carbon Fiber, Kevlar, &amp; Fiberglass Fabrics Some carbon fiber, especially specialty &amp; aerospace grade, fabrics are still expected to be difficult to obtain through 2007, therefore supplies may vary throughout the year.... 100% Carbon Fiber Fabrics T700-TX Part# Oz. Width Weave Cost () Payment link T700-TX 15.8oz 59.2 Tri-Axial 69/yrd Number of yrds: yrds X 59.2 wide This fabric ships in 3 to 5 business days (this is our ONLY fabric with a minimum order ... 12 yards..., sorry). 34% stronger than commercial grade carbon! 6900 for a 100yard roll Please contact for roll purchases! Click Here for Detailed Fabric Specs HUGE Sale on Plain Weave fabrics! T300-PW 6.0oz 50 wide Plain Weave 30.99 / yard Number of yards : In-stock Sale! *** T300 50 Full roll price = 2650.00 Please call to order *** 3K 6oz Carbon Plain Weave Discounts do exist for 25+ yards, please contact us! T300-1K42-PW 3.74oz 42 wide Plain weave 42.99 yard Number of yards : In-stock Sale! (with fiberglass tracers that turn clear with all resins [ex. Polyester &amp; Epoxy Resins]) Tracers are tiny threads that helps you perfectly align your piece and are completely transparent once you add polyester or epoxy resin T300-4HS 5.7oz 48.5 wide Harness-Satin 45 Weave 34.99 / yard Number of yards : In-stock Sale! (with fiberglass tracers (every 22X24) that turn clear with all resins [ex. Polyester &amp; Epoxy Resins]) Tracers are tiny threads (every 2X 6) that helps you perfectly align your piece and are completely transparent once you add polyester or epoxy resin This is a stunningly gorgeous fabric! Use this rarely available fabric for the most sophisticated carbon look. Also excellent for extremely curvy pieces! T650-5HS 11.0oz 60.25 wide Harness-Satin H5 Weave 38.99 / yard Number of yards : In-stock Sale! ***Very hard to find, aerospace grade T650 fabric is 17% stronger than commercial grade T300*** (with fiberglass tracers (every 2X6) that turn clear with all resins [ex. Polyester &amp; Epoxy Resins]) Tracers are tiny threads (every 2X 6) helps you perfectly align your piece and are completely transparent once you add polyester or epoxy resin) 5 Harness Satin 6K 11oz T300-TX 5.7oz 50 Twill roll 100 yrds Number of rolls : 2499.00 One Roll; *** 2449.00*** Two+ rolls; *** 2399.00 *** Five+ rolls Close-up (above) ****HUGE SALE**** 3K 5.7oz T300 Carbon 2X2 Twill Weave T300-TX 5.7oz 50 Twill 29.99 / yard Number of yards : 29.49 /yrd 5yrds+; 28.50 /yrd 10 yrds+; 26.50 /yrd 25 yards+; 26.00 /yrd 50 yrds+ In-Stock!!! Hybrids shown above:Blue, Orange, Yellow, Dark Greenish-Brown &amp; Gold 50/50 Carbon Fiber Hybrids We process credit cards over the phone! We accept: We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping! If ordering via our on-line cart, we will refund you any over-shipping charges when we ship you item(s)! Email us your order and we will send you a custom link with the correct shipping. Or call us with a credit card and we will only charge your card the correct amount after we ship your item(s). Thank you! 5.5oz 50inch 2X2 Twill pricing below Number of feet Carbon/Red Kevlar Carbon/Blue Kevlar Carbon/Yellow Kevlar Carbon/Basalt Carbon/Gold Zylon Carbon is 5.7oz 3K T300, colored fabric is 5.0oz Colored Kevlar (from Dupont), 5.0oz Natural colored Zylon ( Gold ), or 8.8oz Natural colored Basalt ( Dark Greenish/Brown ). Weaves/inch is identical to 3K 2x2 twill: 12.5X12.5 pic 5.5oz Carbon / Red or Blue Kevlar 34.41/yard (12.49 for 1 or 2 ft) 5.50z Carbon / Yellow Kevlar 30.60/yard (11.49 for 1 or 2 ft) 7.2oz Carbon/ Basalt (Dark Greenish/Brown) 28.98/yard (11.49 for 1 or 2 ft) 5.5oz Carbon/ Gold Zylon 58.98/yard (22.99 for 1 or 2 ft) All colors are In-stock! ( Pictures can \'t do these gorgeous fabrics justice!) An additional 5% discount applies for 50 yrds+, 10% discount for 100 yrds+ Need help choosing the right fabric? Click Here! Silver Carbon Fiber aka Texalium Fabrics This fabric is virtually identical in weave size, spacing and looks like 100% Carbon 2X2 Twill weave, but in silver (and much cheaper ). TXS85 8.51 50inches Twill Number of feet ft X 50 wide In-Stock! Pricing: 7.99/ft 1-5ft ; 7.49/ft 6-10 ft ; 6.99/ft 11-29 ft ; 6.49/ft 30ft-49ft ; 6.00/ft 50ft Please note this fabric is aluminum coated fiberglass. It is commonly referred to as silver carbon fiber, but it contains no carbon fiber..... Red, Silver , Black , &amp; Gold Carbon Fiber aka Texalium Fabrics These are Hexcel colored Texalium fabrics. Note that they are a tighter weave than Silver Texalium above, since they are lighter weight fabrics (6.02 vs. 8.51oz) . TXS62 6.02 50inches Twill Number of feet ft Gold 50 wide Twill Texalium TXS62 6.2oz Red 50 Wide Twill Texalium TXS62 6.2oz Black 47 Wide Twill Texalium TXS62 6.2oz Silver 39 wide Twill Texalium TXS62 6.2oz Red &amp; Gold 50 wide, Black 47 wide, Silver 39 wide In-Stock! Pricing: Red &amp; Gold: .....7.99/ft 1-5ft ; 7.49/ft 6-10 ft ; 6.99/ft 11-29 ft ; 6.49/ft 30ft-49ft ; 6.00/ft 50ft Black &amp; Silver: 4.99/ft 1-5ft ; 4.49/ft 6-10 ft ; 3.99/ft 11-29 ft ; 3.49/ft 30ft-49ft ; 3.00/ft 50ft Please note this fabric is aluminum coated fiberglass. It is commonly referred to as silver, red, etc carbon fiber, but it contains no carbon fiber..... Kevlar Fabric DK-H4 5.0 50inches Harness-Satin 18.99/yard Number of yrds X 50 wide In-Stock! 1.34oz Fiberglass Veil Fabric FG134-PW 1.34oz 50inches Plain Weave 1.88/yard Number of yrds X 50 wide In-Stock! FHXTW88 Natural Colored Fiberglass Fabrics FHXTW88 8.8 38inches Twill 8.99 Number of yrds X 38 wide In-Stock! How we care for your fabric! 1st - We roll your fabric onto a cardboard core (we never fold composite fabric!) 2nd- We wrap your cloth in a plastic liner to protect it and keep it clean 3rd - We wrap your fabric in paper padding to protect it inside the shipping box 4th - We enclose that in a cardboard box &amp; seal all box edges to make it virtually waterproof You packaged it better than any other source I have bought carbon from... We professionally roll your fabric, wrap it with a plastic liner, then wrap it with paper padding, enclose it in a cardboard box, &amp; seal all box edges to make it virtually waterproof! Shipping is same or next business day! Customer Comments: -...This seller is simply the best. Excellent product and a top notch dealer -...I got your carbon, and beside the perfect packaging, the quality of the product is really beautiful...Thanks -... Thanks again for your excellent customer service... -... Excellent product. Superb communication... -...great stuff, super fast ship -...thanks guys nice product, carbon fiber was beautiful shipping was great thanks... -... Great product, service, price, &amp; shipping. Excellent transaction.. -...Awesome stuff, great deal too!!! -...The carbon fiber cloth is beautiful. Very reasonable price. Good shipping. -...Great deal ------- and thanks for the super quick service!!!!!!! -...great to deal with, would definitely do it again - ...You packaged it better then any other source I have bought carbon from... - ...looks great just what I expected... - ...looks good...I will be doing business with you again..... - ...I just received your product and I want more... its very good and comes out looking great... - ...packed well, shipped fast - ...Great guy to work with never seen any one as good as this seller -...A++++++++++ Very nice to deal with - ...Fast shipment -...it looks great.. I will let you know in the future if I need more.. -...Great item! Fast delivery! Easy transaction! -...Shipped perfectly, Timely, Item as described -...hope to do business with again -...As promised and more -...all I can say is DAMN YOU \'RE GOOD! You WILL be hearing from me again Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLC \'s sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",64);arrFiles[29]=new Array(30,"composites/Epoxy.html","24 Jun 2008","* Soller Composites * Epoxy &amp; Related products","","","Site Map Home Page Contact Us or call 603 998 1947 Epoxy Kits We Ship same day if possible! (We sell only the very best epoxy- West Systems Brand!) We are happy to process your credit card over the phone! We accept: Premium All Weather Hardener Kit A: 64.99 Nitrile Gloves Size Small Medium Large XLarge 0.66pt 207SA Special Hardener 1qt 105A Resin A uto-measure Pump kit MC. VISA, AX, JCB, Diners Club, and Discover Please contact us! Click here to learn of other payment option Our online Store uses Paypal What \'s PayPal? Premium All Weather Hardener Kit B: 53.99 Hardener Type 205A 206A 0.44pt 205A or 206A Hardener 1qt 105A Resin, A uto-measure Pump kit Have Questions? P lease contact us! We will ONLY charge you what it costs us for shipping + 2 max. (for shipping materials). We will refund you any shipping over charges when we ship you item(s)! or please call us with a Credit Card All Weather Hardener Kit C: 58.93 0.66pt 207SA Special 1qt 105A Resin Fast or Slow Hardener Kit D: 47.93 Hardener Type 205A 206A 205A Fast or 206A Slow Hardener 1qt 105A Resin INDIVIDUAL PRODUCTS UNIT SIZE Our PRICE West System Resins 105A Resin Qty: 1 qt. 29.74 105B Resin Qty: 0.98 gal. 73.99 105C Resin Please call for pricing 4.35 gal. 105E Resin Please call for pricing 52.03gal West Systems Hardeners 205A Fast Hardener Qty: 0.44 pt. 18.19 205B Fast Hardener Qty: 0.86 qt. 31.39 205C Fast Hardener Qty: Please call for pricing 0.94 gal. Please call 205E Fast Hardener 11.31gal. Please call 206A Hardener Qty: 0.44 pt. 18.19 206B Hardener Qty: 0.86 qt. 31.39 206C Hardener Qty: 0.94 gal. Please call 206E Slow Hardener (please call) 11.31gal. Please call 207A Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 0.66 pt. 29.19 207B Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 0.33 gal. 60.53 207C Special All Weather Hardener Qty: 1.45 gal. Please call 207E Special All Weather Hardener (please call) 17.34gal. Please call 209A Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 0.66 pt. 28.99 209B Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 0.33 gal. 55.99 209C Extra Slow Hardener Qty: 1.45 gal. Please call 209E Extra Slow Hardener (please call) 17.34gal Please call West Systems 5 Minute Epoxy Kits 865- 4oz Hardener &amp; 4oz. Resin Qty: 8fl oz. total 17.79 865- 16oz Hardener &amp; 16oz. Resin Qty: 32fl oz. total 39.49 Small Project Epoxy Kit 0.56oz 105Resin &amp; 0.11oz 205 Hardener (enough for 1 sq ft) Qty: 4.99 (set of 6) Small Project Epoxy Kits (enough for 6 sq ft) Qty: 19.49 Minipumps Auto-measuring pumps - no need to measure quantities yourself! (one squirt resin + one squirt hardener -perfect measuring every time!) 300 Mini Pump Set (for Group Size A, B or C) Set of 3 Pumps Qty: 8.99 Spare Hardener Pump (fits all sizes A, B, or C) for Hardener Type 205 206 207 209 (Special! buy 1 spare 205 or 206 pump &amp; we \'ll ship a 2nd one to you for free!) 1.00 C o l o r P i g m e n t s (1.0oz pigment covers approx 64sq ft) 1.0oz Epoxy Pigment Color Choice Dark Grey Bright Red Surf Blue Dark Blue Yellow Dark Brown Black White Dark Green 12.75 4.0oz Epoxy Pigment Color Choice Dark Grey Bright Red Surf Blue Dark Blue Yellow Dark Brown Black White Dark Green 22.40 Detailed Epoxy Hardener Info Hardener Pot Life at 72F Pot Life at 95F Cure to Solid 72F Cure to Solid 95F Cure to Max Strength 72F Working Temp Range 205 9-12min not recommended 6-8hrs N/A 1-4days 40-88F 206 20-25min not recommended 9-12hrs N/A 1-4days 60-98F 207 22-27min not recommended 9-12hrs N/A 4-7days 64-100F 209 40-50min 15-20min 20-24hrs 6-8hrs 4-9days 70-108F Note 1/2 ounce resin will cover about 12 sq area. When to Choose the 207 (all weather) Hardener: We use and sell West System \'s 207 product ourselves, because it is the best epoxy available anywhere. Tests have shown that this product looks virtually brand new after a full year of harsh New England weather exposure. Note that the 207 is the clearest of all West System \'s epoxies. So when (and why) should you pay more for the 207 vs. the 205 or 206 hardener, or other Brand \'s cheaper epoxies? If your product will be exposed to water, humidity, large temperature variations, or direct sunlight, it is well worth the few extra dollars you spend up-front for the 207, vs. watching your product yellow or flake-off prematurely (often times within 1 year). If your application will be indoors and not directly exposed to sunlight, water, and humidity, you may want to consider using the less expensive 205 or 206 hardener. We buy, use ourselves (for our composites shop), and sell West System brand Epoxy only because it is the best. If there was an equivalent and cheaper product on the market, we wouldn \'t be using West Systems. Why use Epoxy vs. Vinylester vs. Polyester Resins Click Here Resolving Common Epoxy Related Issues Click Here All Epoxy is shipped via UPS and insured up to 100.00. We can only ship these products within the USA and Canada. Epoxy Fillers Filler Description 403 403 Microfibers are made of fine cotton fibers and is used as a thickening additive with resin/hardener to create a multi-purpose adhesive. Microfibers and epoxy are particularly effective in bonding wood. Epoxy thickened with microfibers provides good gap-filling qualities while retaining excellent wetting and penetration capabilities. Microfibers are used primarily in bonding and gap-filling applications. Microfibers are non-toxic, but care should be taken to avoid inhalation. Color: Off-White. 6oz. 6.99 20oz. 16.99 20lbs. 149.99 404 404 High-Density filler is a thickening additive developed for maximum physical properties in hardware bonding where high-cyclic loads are anticipated. It can also be used for filleting and gap-filling where maximum strength is necessary. May be added to the resin/hardener at a rate of 20 to 30% by weight, depending on the viscosity needed. Color: Off-White. 15.2oz. 9.99 43oz. 22.99 30lbs. 165.99 405 405 Filleting Blend is a strong, wood-toned filler for use in glue joints and fillets on naturally-finished wooden interiors. Mixes easily with epoxy and lets you create fillets that are smooth and require little sanding. Color is a consistent tan so it can be used to modify the shade of other West System fillers. 8oz. 9.99 406 406 Colloidal Silica is a thickening additive used to control the viscosity of epoxy and prevent epoxy runoff in vertical and overhead joints. 406 is a very strong filler that creates a smooth mixture, ideal for general bonding and filleting. It is also our most versatile filler. Often used in combination with other fillers, it can be used to improve the improve strength, abrasion resistance, and consistency of fairing compounds, resulting in a tougher, smoother surface. Color: off-white. 1.7oz. 5.99 5.5oz. 16.99 10 lbs. 174.99 407 407 Low-Density filler is a blended Microballoon-based filler used primarily to make inexpensive filling and fairing putties which are easy to sand or carve while still being a reasonably good engineering material on a strength-to-weight basis. It can also be used as a thickening additive for bonding veneers and in low-stress structural applications where light weight can be beneficial. Good feathering and won \'t sag. Color: Reddish-Brown. 4oz. 10.99 12oz. 28.75 14 lbs. 272.00 410 410 The ideal low-density filler for creating a light, easily worked fairing compound especially suited for fairing large areas. 410 MICROLIGHT handles well and mixes with greater ease than 407 or Microballoons, and is approximately 30% easier to sand. It is also more economical for large fairing jobs but is not recommended under dark paint or other surfaces subjected to high temperatures. Cures to a light tan color. Do not mix 410 MICROLIGHT filler with polyester or vinylester resins. Microlight will inhibit the cure of polyester or vinylester resins. 2oz. 9.92 5oz. 22.15 4 lbs. 199.99 We sell the full line of West Systems products. Please contact us for other items! West System Epoxy Links: Epoxy User \'s Manual West System Epoxy ***Safety Information*** Please Use Epoxy Safely! Make sure you have protective clothing, gloves, an appropriate respirator and use the product in a well ventilated area. Please, read the safety info. in the links above and follow all manufacturer \'s suggestions! Soller Composites assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of the either, of any materials, product, information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of all products and determine the proper use and suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Soller Composites \'s sole responsibility and/or liability is limited to the replacement of product or refund of the purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",96);arrFiles[30]=new Array(31,"images/SleeveMovie.wmv","22 Jun 2005","SleeveMovie.wmv","","","",11847);arrFiles[31]=new Array(32,"ColoredSleeveInfo.html","6 Aug 2007","**Soller Composites** Custom Colored Fabrics","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 About Your Colored Fabrics/Sleeves Our ( patent pending) coloring procedures are the result of years of research. All of our colorants are compatible with Epoxy, Polyester and Vinylester resins &amp; hardeners. All of our custom colored products are intended primarily for aesthetic (looks, not strength) applications. Many of our colorants are slight electrically conductive and are therefore not intended for electrical applications or any other application where this conductivity is specifically not desired. Our colorants have been successfully tested up to 150 degrees F. Our coloring procedure is a custom process. Each colored sleeves/product (for non-Natural colors) is a custom product made specifically to your specification (color, specific fabric/sleeve type, and length). For information regarding returns of custom colored sleeves/fabrics, please refer to the Custom Made or Cut Products/Fabrics section of our refund policy . As with most coloring procedures, the actual color of the sleeve requested may vary very slightly between batches. Please ask for samples if/as needed for your application. If you have any questions, we are more than happy to work with you. Please contact us if you would like more info. We can and do color-match! Please send us at least a sample the size of 2x2 so that we can match your color. For custom colored fabrics/sleeve orders under 500.00, there is a 15.00 color matching fee and a 25.00 minimum custom colored fabric and/or sleeve order requirement. We will keep your custom color on file for 1 year. If you want us to permanantly record your color(s), we ask for a 5.00 recording fee no matter how many custom colors we permanantly record for you. Working with Your Colored Sleeves With a little care you can create beautiful custom products with your colored sleeves! Please note that our colored sleeves are normally a bit stiffer than our natural sleeves. Before applying resin to your sleeves, particularly if the sleeves have been sitting around for some time, you can easily soften them up by working them a bit or by gently pulling them over a blunt object (such as a table edge or a rounded tool handle). Important Safety Information! If you purchased Carbon Fiber, Fiberglass, Basalt, or colored fabrics from us, please understand that these products generate fiber dust. Use caution when combining with resins/hardeners to insure temperatures do not exceed the heat threshold. All of these products may irritate the skin, eyes, mucous membranes, or potentially damage your throat, lungs, other parts of your respiratory system, and may have other long term exposure health affects. Never handle these products without proper safety equipment. Please use adequate ventilation in your work area and use a dust and organic vapor respirator, Nitrile gloves, and sealed goggles. Always wash thoroughly after working with these products. Carbon fiber, all colored fabrics/sleeving, and their dust do conduct electricity. Please keep these products and their dust always from contacting any outlets, plugs, and electrical devices. Do not eat, ingest, or place products in mouth. Do not incinerate these products. If you don&rsquo;t have the appropriate safety equipment for working with these products, please contact us, we will be happy to work with you. If you would like more info, please contact us. If you don&rsquo;t have access to the internet and/or you would like us to mail you this info, please contact us and we will be happy to do so. Thank you, Soller Composites, LLC www.sollercomposites.com 603 934 1029 Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). The buyer agrees not to use these products directly or indirectly for any military purpose (ex. missile development, chemical, nuclear, biological use), except those directly approved by the USA federal government. The buyer accepts full responsibility for, and is responsible for determining the prohibited use of all products. Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs, its employees, owners, contractors, and partner(s) sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. ",7);arrFiles[32]=new Array(33,"EpoxyResinChoice_files/filelist.xml","25 Apr 2007","filelist.xml","","","",1);arrFiles[33]=new Array(34,"composites/Movie1.html","6 Jan 2006","Untitled Document","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 Back to Sleeve Pricing Page Please install Quick time to view this movie, thank you! If video does not play try Clicking Here or Click Here to try Windows Media Player Playing Quicktime Media Player This page may take at least several seconds to play (this is a 4Mb movie) ",3);arrFiles[34]=new Array(35,"MakingShafts_files/filelist.xml","23 Jul 2007","filelist.xml","","","",1);arrFiles[35]=new Array(36,"CommonEpoxyIssues_files/filelist.xml","23 Jul 2007","filelist.xml","","","",1);arrFiles[36]=new Array(37,"fabric.html","12 Nov 2007","Untitled Document","","","Site Map Home Page Index of Materials and Products Contact Us or call 603 934 1029 Below are explanations of some of our fabrics &amp; when they should be used Plain Weave 3Kx3K 6.0oz./195g 0.009 Thick 100% Carbon Fiber Fabric 12x12pic Above Left: Plain Weave A plain weave will fray the least of all the weaves and is ideal for most flat or slightly curved applications. If you are not working with rounded objects and tight bends, you \'ll love fabric. 3KX3K 2X2 Twill 5.7oz./281g 0.009 Thick 100% Carbon Fiber Fabric 12.5x12.5pic Above Center: 3K Twill Weave This is a gorgeous fabric, more so than the plain. It works around tight corners and rounded edges very well. This is a very soft fabric and makes anything absolutely beautiful. Being a Twill, it comes apart at the edges a bit easier than a Plain weave, but you gain the fabric flexibility so often desired! The 3K Plain is the identical fabric as this 3K Twill. Note that the H8 is a bit more flexible than a twill, but a twill gives the most dramatic appearance with its 3D look. Twill close-up (H8 Harness-Satin H8) 3Kx3K 11.0oz/375g 0.011Thick 32&amp;65wide 100% Carbon Fiber Fabric 24x24pic Above Right: H8 Harness-Satin Weave This gorgeous fabric has the tightest weave of all fabrics we carry. When you use this fabric you will not see through to any structure beneath it. This fabric also bends around round objects very well. Note that this fabric is more expensive per linear ft than the Twill or Plain weave but this harness is cheaper per weight than the Plain or Twill . So if you plan to use two layers of the Plain or Twill, you can save by using only one layer of this Harness H8 vs. 2 layers of the Twill. A Harness bends around complex curves better than a Twill! The H8 has the most sophisticated look of all the fabrics. This particular fabric curves around objects as well as an H4 (better than any other fabric). You will absolutely fall in love with this fabric and want to use it over any other! We love this fabric! H8 Close-up ( Harness-Satin H5) 6Kx6K 12oz/358g 0.016Thick 49wide 100% Carbon Fiber Fabric 12x12pic Above Left: H5 Harness-Satin Weave Another gorgeous fabric! It has a looser weave than the Twill or Plain, but not quite as loose as the H8 fabric. This fabric is excelant for going around corners. 3Kx1500denier Twill 5.4oz 0.009Thick 50wide 50% Carbon fiber 50% Yellow Kevlar 12.5x13pic Above Center: Twill Weave This gorgeous fabric works very well around corners, just like the Twill T300 above. This very soft twill creates one of the best looking finished products. It is also highly desirable in applications that require the strength of carbon fiber and the resilience of Kevlar. Use this fabric when you want/need some of the very best aesthetics! This fabric is a bit more expensive than a twill, so if you are going to use multiple layers, you may want to consider a cheaper fabric underneath this beautiful twill. 3Kx1500denier Twill 5.4oz 0.009Thick 50wide 50%Carbon fiber 50%Orange Kevlar 13x13pic Above Left: Orange) &amp; Blue Twill These gorgeous fabrics are virtually identical to the Yellow Hybrid (left). They work very well around corners, just like the 3K Twill above They are a very soft twill &amp; create one of the best looking finished products. They are also highly desirable in applications that require the strength of carbon fiber and the resilience of Kevlar. Use this fabric when you want/ need some of the very best aesthetics! This fabric is a bit more expensive than the 3K Twill, so if you are going to use multiple layers, you may want to consider a cheaper fabric underneath this beautiful twill. (TXS85 Twill) 3K 8.51oz/241g 0.013 Thick 50 wide Silver Carbon Fiber aka Silver Texalium Above Left: TXS85 Twill Weave Silver Texalium aka Silver Carbon Fiber is actually aluminum coated 2X2 Twill woven fiberglass. It is extremely popular since it is low cost and still gives that beautiful twill carbon fiber weave look . This fabric is virtually identical in weave size, spacing and looks to our 100% Carbon 2X2 Twill weave, but in silver. Shown and sold in Silver, this fabric is excellent for aesthetic overlay work. (DK-H4 Harness-Satin H4) 3K 1420 denier 5.0oz/168g .008Thick 50 wide 100% Yellow Kevlar 17X17pic Above Center: DK-H4 Harness-Satin Weave This gorgeous fabric is ideal for molding around complex curves, even better than twill! This is a super soft beautiful fabric and is ideal for applications that require or desire Kevlar. This Kevlar is specified as Kevlar 49 used for composites , (ballistics Kevlar is Kevlar 29). Kevlar is not as strong as carbon fiber (about 15% weaker than our other Carbon Fabrics). When Kevlar breaks it generally goes back to a fabric, unlike Carbon Fiber that splinters similar to fiberglass. Please contact us for more info. (FHX88 Twill) 3K 8.8oz/246g 0.009 Thick 38 wide 100% Fiberglass 12X12pic Above Right: FHX88 2X2 Twil l This gorgeous fabric is virtually identical to our 2X2 carbon fiber Twill, but in fiberglass. When you apply resin to this fabric it turns clear, making it ideal to use over top of kevlar since you can sand the fiberglass smooth. Use anywhere you want a composite fabric but don \'t need the super strength of carbon fiber. Need help choosing the right fabric type? What \'s the difference between the fabric weaves?What \'s a pic? Click Here! ",14);arrFiles[37]=new Array(38,"SafetyInfo.html","5 Nov 2007","Safety Info","","","Important Safety Information! If you purchased Carbon Fiber, Fiberglass, Basalt, or colored fabrics from us, please understand that these products generate fiber dust. If you purchased custom colored fabrics or sleeving from us, keep these fabrics away from any heat source over 150 degrees F. Use caution when combining with resins/hardeners to insure temperatures do not exceed the heat threshold. All of these products may irritate the skin, eyes, mucous membranes, or potentially damage your throat, lungs, other parts of your respiratory system, and may have other long term exposure health affects. Never handle these products without proper safety equipment. Please use adequate ventilation in your work area and use a dust and organic vapor respirator, Nitrile gloves, and sealed goggles. Always wash thoroughly after working with these products. Carbon fiber, all colored fabrics/sleeving, and their dust do conduct electricity. Please keep these products and their dust away from contacting any outlets, plugs, and electrical devices. Do not eat, ingest, or place products in mouth. Do not incinerate these products. If you don&rsquo;t have the appropriate safety equipment for working with these products, please contact us, we will be happy to work with you. Please visit the following web page to get specific MSDSs: http://www.solarcomposites.com/MSDS.html . If you would like more info, please contact us. If you received Epoxy from us, we strongly encourage you to please read the user manual and safety information (links are located on the West Systems epoxy manufacturer main web page www.westsystem.com ) and follow all of their recommendations. If you have any question regarding the product, we are more than happy to help you. If you have any safety questions that are not answered in the documentation, please feel free to contact the manufacturer directly. You can find additional information about West Systems epoxy on their web site: www.westsystem.com or feel free to contact them: Please use epoxy safely! If you don&rsquo;t have the appropriate safety equipment for working with epoxy, please contact us. We will be happy to work with you. Epoxy Manufacturer ( Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 100 Patterson Ave. , P.O. Box 908 , Bay City , MI 48707-0908 989-684-7286 / Fax 989-684-1374 Business Hours: Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:00pm ET ) If you don&rsquo;t have access to the internet and/or you would like us to mail you this info, please contact us and we will be happy to do so. Thank you, Soller Composites, LLC www.sollercomposites.com 603 934 1029 Exporting of Composite Fabrics: The Exporting of Composite fabrics outside the USA is restricted by the USA federal government. Soller Composites, LLC does not authorize the resale or export of any of it products without express written permission. Exporting of our product outside the USA may be prohibited by USA export regulation. Please contact us for more info, if/as needed. Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). The buyer agrees not to use these products directly or indirectly for any military purpose (ex. missile development, chemical, nuclear, biological use), except those directly approved by the USA federal government. The buyer accepts full responsibility for, and is responsible for determining the prohibited use of all products. Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs, its employees, owners, contractors, and partner(s) sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. Please contact us if you have any questions. Our Return Policy We are 100% committed to customer satisfaction! We very rarely have requests for returns. Nevertheless, below are our general guidelines. Please contact us if you have any issue with any product we sell. We will be more than happy to work with you! Product Returns: We will gladly provide (excluding shipping related costs) either (your choice): 1) full store credit for any returned item received within 90 days of purchased and received in unused &amp; undamaged condition; or 2) a refund -a 10% restocking fee applies to all returns within 60 days of purchase, or -for items received between 60 &amp; 90 days from purchase date, we will gladly offer you store credit Custom Made or Cut Products/Fabrics: Clearly it is difficult to resell custom made, colored or cut products&amp;/or fabrics. If you decide to return these items, we will either (your choice): 1) resell your item(s) for you and refund 100% of what we receive, or 2) offer you immediate payment or store credit, based on the best price we believe we can receive for selling your items Cost of shipping, shipping insurance, shipping materials, brokerage fees, customs fees &amp;/or return shipping can not be refunded, sorry. If you have an issue with any of these guidelines, please contact us. We are always happy to work with our customers! ",8);arrFiles[38]=new Array(39,"MSDS/MSDS105.pdf","11 Mar 2008","1","","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: ....................... WEST SYSTEM® 105 Epoxy Resin. PRODUCT CODE:........................ 105 CHEMICAL FAMILY:................. Epoxy Resin. CHEMICAL NAME:..................... Bisphenol A based epoxy resin. FORMULA: ................................... Not applicable. MANUFACTURER: Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 100 Patterson Avenue Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 989-684-7286 EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC: .........800-424-9300 Non-transportation Poison Hotline: .......800-222-1222  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS INGREDIENT NAME  Bisphenol-A type epoxy resin Benzyl alcohol Bisphenol-F type epoxy resin Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether  CAS #  25085-99-8 100-51-6 28064-14-4 111-76-2  CONCENTRATION  > 50% < 20% < 20% < 0.3%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 2 Flammability - 1 Reactivity - 0  WARNING! May cause allergic skin response in certain individuals. May cause moderate irritation to the skin. Light yellow liquid with mild odor. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................... Skin contact. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION: ......................................... Not likely to cause acute effects unless heated to high temperatures. If product is heated, vapors generated can cause headache, nausea, dizziness and possible respiratory irritation if inhaled in high concentrations. CHRONIC INHALATION:.................................... Not likely to cause chronic effects. Repeated exposure to high vapor concentrations may cause irritation of pre-existing lung allergies and increase the chance of developing allergy symptoms to this product. ACUTE SKIN CONTACT: .................................... May cause allergic skin response in certain individuals. May cause moderate irritation to the skin such as redness and itching.  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 2 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 105 Resin  CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: ............................... May cause sensitization in susceptible individuals. May cause moderate irritation to the skin. EYE CONTACT: ..................................................... May cause irritation. INGESTION: ........................................................... Low acute oral toxicity. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: .................. Possible sensitization and subsequent allergic reactions usually seen as redness and rashes. Repeated exposure is not likely to cause other adverse health effects. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Pre-existing skin and respiratory disorders may be aggravated by exposure to this product. Pre-existing lung and skin allergies may increase the chance of developing allergic symptoms to this product. 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES........................................... Flush immediately with water for at least 15 minutes. Consult a physician. FIRST AID FOR SKIN ........................................... Remove contaminated clothing. Wipe excess from skin. Remove with waterless skin cleaner and then wash with soap and water. Consult a physician if effects occur. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION........................... Remove to fresh air if effects occur. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION .............................. No adverse health effects expected from amounts ingested under normal conditions of use. Seek medical attention if a significant amount is ingested. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ....................................................... >200°F (Tag Closed Cup) EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................. Foam, carbon dioxide (CO2), dry chemical. SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: Wear a self-contained breathing apparatus and complete full-body personal protective equipment. Closed containers may rupture (due to buildup of pressure) when exposed to extreme heat. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES ........................ Soak up in absorbent material or scrape up. Residual can be removed with non-flammable solvent, but solvent should be used sparingly and with appropriate precautions. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.):.......... 40°F (4°C) / 120°F (49°C) SHELF LIFE:........................................................... Three years or more in original sealed container.  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 3 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 105 Resin  STORAGE:............................................................... Store in cool, dry place. Store in tightly sealed containers to prevent moisture absorption and loss of volatiles. Excessive heat over long periods of time will degrade the resin. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: .............................. Avoid prolonged or repeated skin contact. Wash thoroughly after handling. Launder contaminated clothing before reuse. Avoid inhalation of vapors from heated product. Precautionary steps should be taken when curing product in large quantities. When mixed with epoxy curing agents this product causes an exothermic, which in large masses, can produce enough heat to damage or ignite surrounding materials and emit fumes and vapors that vary widely in composition and toxicity. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION: EYE PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................... Safety glasses with side shields or chemical splash goggles. SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES:................... Wear liquid-proof, chemical resistant gloves (nitrilebutyl rubber, neoprene, butyl rubber or natural rubber) and full body-covering clothing. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION GUIDELINES: Good room ventilation is usually adequate for most operations. Wear a NIOSH/MSHA approved respirator with an organic vapor cartridge whenever exposure to vapor in concentrations above applicable limits is likely. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES:...... Practice good caution and personal cleanliness to avoid skin and eye contact. Avoid skin contact when removing gloves and other protective equipment. Wash thoroughly after handling. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS: ........... Not established for product as whole. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients. 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM: ................................................ Liquid. COLOR: ................................................................... Clear to pale yellow. ODOR: ...................................................................... Mild. BOILING POINT: ................................................... > 400°F. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT:................... No data. VISCOSITY: ............................................................ 1,000 cPs. pH:............................................................................. No data. SOLUBILITY IN WATER:.................................... Slight. SPECIFIC GRAVITY:............................................ 1.15 BULK DENSITY: .................................................... 9.6 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE: .............................................. < 1 mmHg @ 20°C. VAPOR DENSITY: ................................................. Heavier than air. % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT: ............................... EPA Method 24, as described in 40 CFR Part 60, was used to determine the Volatile Matter Content of mixed epoxy resin and hardener. This method states that two-component coating systems should be tested by mixing the individual components together at the proper ratio. Refer to the hardener \'s MSDS for information about the total volatile content of the resin/hardener system.  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  10. REACTIVITY:  Page 4 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 105 Resin  STABILITY: ............................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: .................. Will not occur by itself, but a mass of more than one pound of product plus an aliphatic amine will cause irreversible polymerization with significant heat buildup. INCOMPATIBILITIES:......................................... Strong acids, bases, amines and mercaptans can cause polymerization. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS: ........................ Carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide fumes may be produced when heated to decomposition. 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No specific oral, inhalation or dermal toxicology data is known for this product. Specific toxicology information for a bisphenol-A based epoxy resin present in this product is indicated below: Oral: ................................................. LD50 >5000 mg/kg (rats) Inhalation: ........................................ No Data. Dermal: ............................................ LD50 = 20,000 mg/kg (skin absorption in rabbits) TERATOLOGY:.............................. ..................Diglycidyl ether bisphenol-A (DGEBPA) did not cause birth defects or other adverse effects on the fetus when pregnant rabbits were exposed by skin contact, the most likely route of exposure, or when pregnant rats or rabbits were exposed orally. Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether (present at < 0.3 %) causes harm to the fetus in laboratory animal studies. Harm to the fetus occurs at exposure levels that harm the pregnant animal. The relevance of these findings to humans is uncertain. REPRODUCTIVE EFFECTS: ........ ...................DGEBPA, in animal studies, has been shown not to interfere with reproduction. MUTAGENICITY:.......................... ....................DGEBPA in animal mutagenicity studies were negative. In vitro mutagenicity tests were negative in some cases and positive in others. CARCINOGENICITY: NTP ..................................................................... Product not listed. IARC ................................................................... Product not listed. OSHA .................................................................. Product not listed. Many studies have been conducted to assess the potential carcinogenicity of diglycidyl ether of bisphenolA. Although some weak evidence of carcinogenicity has been reported in animals, when all of the data are considered, the weight of evidence does not show that DGEBPA is carcinogenic. Indeed, the most recent review of the available data by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has concluded that DGEBPA is not classified as a carcinogen. Epichlorohydrin, an impurity in this product (<5 ppm) has been reported to produce cancer in laboratory animals and to produce mutagenic changes in bacteria and cultured human cells. It has been established by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) as a probable human carcinogen (Group 2A)  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 5 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 105 Resin  based on the following conclusions: human evidence ­ inadequate; animal evidence ­ sufficient. It has been classified as an anticipated human carcinogen by the National Toxicology Program (NTP). 12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: Prevent entry into sewers and natural waters. May cause localized fish kill. Movement and Partitioning: Bioconcentration potential is moderate (BCF between 100 and 3000 or Log Kow between 3 and 5). Degradation and Transformation: Theoretical oxygen demand is calculated to be 2.35 p/p. 20-day biochemical oxygen demand is <2.5%. Ecotoxicology: Material is moderately toxic to aquatic organisms on an acute basis. LC50/EC50 between 1 and 10 mg/L in most sensitive species. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS: WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD:............................ Evaluation of this product using RCRA criteria shows that it is not a hazardous waste, either by listing or characteristics, in its purchased form. It is the responsibility of the user to determine proper disposal methods. Incinerate, recycle (fuel blending) or reclaim may be preferred methods when conducted in accordance with federal, state and local regulations. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME: ..................................... Not regulated by DOT. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME:......................... Not applicable. D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ...................................... Not applicable. U.N./N.A. NUMBER:............................................... Not applicable. PACKING GROUP:................................................ Not applicable. 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ...................................................... Slight irritant; possible sensitizer. TSCA STATUS: ....................................................... All components are listed on TSCA inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS ............ None (deminimus). STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION: The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state.  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  COMPONENT NAME /CAS NUMBER Epichlorohydrin 106-89-8 Phenyl glycidyl ether 122-60-1 Ethylene Oxide 75-21-8 Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether 111-76-2  1.  Page 6 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 105 Resin  CONCENTRATION < 5ppm <5ppm <0.15% < 0.3%  STATE CODE  1  CA CA CA  1  1  NJ, PA  These substances are known to the state of California to cause cancer or reproductive harm, or both.  16. OTHER INFORMATION: REASON FOR ISSUE:............................................ Update in Section 16. PREPARED BY:...................................................... T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY: ..................................................... G. M. House TITLE: ...................................................................... Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE:................................................ January 5 , 2004 SUPERSEDES DATE: ............................................ January 5, 2001 MSDS NUMBER: .................................................... 105-04a Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight: 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of Gougeon Brothers, Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. Gougeon Brothers, Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS #105-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  ",28);arrFiles[39]=new Array(40,"MSDS/MSDS206.pdf","3 Jul 2006","MSDS for 206 Slow Hardener","Slow Epoxy Hardener","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET West System Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME:................................. WEST SYSTEM® 206TM Slow Hardener. PRODUCT CODE:................................. 206 CHEMICAL FAMILY:............................. Amine. CHEMICAL NAME:................................ Modified aliphatic polyamine. FORMULA: ............................................ Not applicable. MANUFACTURER: West System Inc. 102 Patterson Ave. Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 866-937-8797 or 989-684-7286 www.westsystem.com 2. EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC:..............800-424-9300 (U.S.) 703-527-3887 (International) Non-transportation Poison Hotline: ...........800-222-1222  COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS INGREDIENT NAME Polyoxypropylenediamine Polymer of epichlorohydrin, bisphenol-A, and DETA Tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA) Diethylenetriamine (DETA) Reaction products of TETA and propylene oxide Triethylenetetramine (TETA) CAS # 9046-10-0 31326-29-1 112-57-2 111-40-0 26950-63-0 112-24-3 CONCENTRATION 30-50% < 30% < 30% < 12% < 12% < 12%  3.  HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 3 Flammability - 1 Reactivity - 0  DANGER! Corrosive. Strong skin sensitizer. May cause severe chemical burns to eyes and skin. Harmful if swallowed. Harmful if absorbed through the skin. Can cause respiratory irritation. Light-yellow colored liquid with ammonia odor. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................................... Skin and eye contact, inhalation. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION:........................................................ Excessive exposure to vapor or mist is irritating to the upper respiratory tract, causing nasal discharge, coughing, and discomfort in eyes, nose, throat and chest. Severe cases may cause difficult breathing and lung damage. CHRONIC INHALATION: ................................................... May cause lung damage. May cause respiratory sensitization in susceptible individuals. Repeated exposures may cause internal organ damage. ACUTE SKIN CONTACT:................................................... Corrosive. Prolonged contact may cause skin damage with burns and blistering. Wide spread contact may result in material being absorbed in harmful amounts. CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: .............................................. May cause persistent irritation or dermatitis. Repeated contact may cause allergic reaction/sensitization and possible tissue destruction. Can be absorbed through the skin in amounts that can cause internal organ damage. EYE CONTACT: ................................................................. Corrosive. May cause blurred vision. May cause irritation with corneal injury resulting in permanent vision impairment or even blindness.  MSDS #206-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 2 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 206TM Hardener  INGESTION: ....................................................................... Moderately toxic. May cause gastrointestinal irritation or ulceration. May cause burns of the mouth and throat. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: ................................. Skin irritation, burns and blistering. Irritation of the nose and throat, headache, nausea and vomiting. Eye irritation and blurred vision. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Existing respiratory conditions, such as asthma and bronchitis. Existing skin conditions. 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES: ...................................................... Immediately flush with water for at least 15 minutes. Get prompt medical attention. FIRST AID FOR SKIN: ....................................................... Remove contaminated clothing. Immediately wash skin with soap and water. Do not apply greases or ointments. Get medical attention if severe exposure. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION: .......................................... Move to fresh air and consult physician if effects occur. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION: ............................................ Give conscious person at least 2 glasses of water. Do not induce vomiting. If vomiting should occur spontaneously, keep airway clear. Get medical attention. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ................................................................... > 200°F (Open Cup) EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................................. Water spray, dry chemical, alcohol foam and carbon dioxide (CO2). FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARDS: .................................. Burning can generate toxic fumes. When mixed with sawdust, wood chips, or other cellulosic material, spontaneous combustion can occur under certain conditions. If hardener is spilled into or mixed with sawdust, heat is generated as the air oxidizes the amine. If the heat is not dissipated quickly enough, it can ignite the sawdust. SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: ...................... Use full-body protective gear and a self-contained breathing apparatus. If spill has ignited, use water spray to disperse vapors and protect personnel attempting to stop leak. Use water to cool fire-exposed containers. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES: Stop leak without additional risk. Wear proper personal protective equipment. Dike and contain spill. Ventilate area. Large spill - dike and pump into appropriate container for recovery. Small spill dilute with water and recover or use inert, non-combustible absorbent material (e.g., sand) and shovel into suitable container. Do not use sawdust, wood chips or other cellulosic materials to absorb the spill, as the possibility for spontaneous combustion exists. Wash spill residue with warm, soapy water if necessary. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.): ......................... 40°F (4°C) / 90°F (32°C). STORAGE: ......................................................................... Store in cool, dry place with adequate ventilation. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: ............................................. Use only with adequate ventilation. Do not breath vapors or mists from heated material. Avoid contact with skin and eyes. Wash thoroughly after handling. When mixed with epoxy resin this product causes an exothermic reaction, which in large masses, can produce enough heat to damage or ignite surrounding materials and emit fumes and vapors that vary widely in composition and toxicity. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION: EYE PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................................... Chemical splash goggles, full-face shield or full-face respirator.  MSDS #206-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 3 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 206TM Hardener  SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES: ................................... Wear liquid-proof, chemical resistant gloves (nitrile-butyl rubber, neoprene, butyl rubber or natural rubber) and full body-covering clothing. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION GUIDELINES: General mechanical or local exhaust ventilation. With inadequate ventilation, use a NIOSH/MSHA approved air purifying respirator with an organic vapor cartridge. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES: ........................ Use where there is immediate access to safety shower and emergency eye wash. Provide proper wash/cleanup facilities for proper hygiene. Contact lens should not be worn when working with this material. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS:............................. Not established for product as whole. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients. 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM .............................................................. Liquid. COLOR ............................................................................... Light-yellow. ODOR ................................................................................. Ammonia-like. BOILING POINT ................................................................. > 480°F. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT ..................................... No data. pH ....................................................................................... 11.4 SOLUBILITY IN WATER .................................................... Appreciable. SPECIFIC GRAVITY........................................................... 1.01 BULK DENSITY.................................................................. 8.45 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE........................................................... < 1 mmHg @ 20°C. VAPOR DENSITY ............................................................... Heavier than air. VISCOSITY......................................................................... 200 cPs % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT ................................................. EPA Method 24, as described in 40 CFR Part 60, was used to determine the Volatile Matter Content of mixed epoxy resin and hardener. This method states that two-component coating systems should be tested by determining weight loss after mixing the individual components together at the proper ratio, dissolving them in an appropriate solvent, and subjecting them to a temperature of 230°F. 105 Resin and 206 Hardener, mixed together at 5:1 by weight, has a density of 1176 g/L (9.81 lbs/gal). The combined VOC content for 105/206 is 49.5 g/L (0.41 lbs/gal). 10. REACTIVITY: STABILITY: ........................................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: ................................... Will not occur. INCOMPATIBILITIES: ........................................................ May react violently when in contact with oxidizing materials, acids or halogenated compounds such as methylene chloride. Reactions may be slow initially, then may rapidly generate heat and vapor pressure. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS: ....................................... Burning or excessive heat may produce toxic levels of ammonia, oxides of nitrogen and irritating aldehydes. 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No specific oral, inhalation or dermal toxicology data is known for this product. Oral: ....................................................... Expected to be moderately toxic. Inhalation:............................................... Expected to be moderately toxic. Dermal: .................................................. Expected to be moderately toxic. Adsorption of phenolic solutions through the skin may be very rapid and can cause death. Lesser exposures can cause damage to the kidney, liver, pancreas and spleen; and cause edema of the lungs. Chronic exposures can cause death from liver and kidney damage. CARCINOGENICITY:  MSDS #206-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 4 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 206TM Hardener  NTP.............................................................................. No. IARC ............................................................................ No. OSHA........................................................................... No. This product contains no known carcinogens in concentrations greater than 0.1%. 12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: Wastes from this product may present long term environmental hazards. Do not allow into sewers, on the ground or in any body of water. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS: WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD: .......................................... Evaluation of this product using RCRA criteria shows that it is not a hazardous waste, either by listing or characteristics, in its purchased form. It is the responsibility of the user to determine proper disposal methods. Incinerate, recycle (fuel blending) or reclaim may be preferred methods when conducted in accordance with federal, state and local regulations. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME:................................................... Polyamines, liquid, corrosive, n.o.s. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME: ......................................... Polyoxypropylenediamine. D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ................................................... Class 8 U.N./N.A. NUMBER: ........................................................... UN 2735 PACKING GROUP: ............................................................ PG II 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ................................................................. Corrosive; strong irritant; sensitizer. TSCA STATUS: .................................................................. All components are listed on TSCA inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS:........................... None. STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION: The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state. COMPONENT NAME Tetraethylenepentamine 112-57-2 Tetraethylenetriamine 112-24-3 CONCENTRATION STATE CODE  <30% <12%  FL, MA, NJ, PA FL, MA, NJ, PA  16. OTHER INFORMATION: REASON FOR ISSUE: ....................................................... Update in Section 1. PREPARED BY: ................................................................. T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY:................................................................. G. M. House TITLE:................................................................................. Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE: ............................................................ January 3, 2001 SUPERSEDES DATE:........................................................ January 5, 2004 MSDS NUMBER:................................................................ 206-05a Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight; 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  MSDS #206-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 5 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 206TM Hardener  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of West System Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. West System Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS #206-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  ",45);arrFiles[40]=new Array(41,"MSDS/MSDS205.pdf","3 Jul 2006","1","","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: ....................... WEST SYSTEM® 205 Fast Hardener. PRODUCT CODE:........................ 205 CHEMICAL FAMILY: ................ Amine. CHEMICAL NAME:..................... Modified aliphatic polyamine. FORMULA: ................................... Not applicable. MANUFACTURER: Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 100 Patterson Avenue Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 989-684-7286 EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC: .........800-424-9300 Non-transportation Poison Hotline: .......800-222-1222  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS INGREDIENT NAME  Polyethylenepolyamine Reaction products of TETA with Phenol/Formaldehyde Triethylenetetramine (TETA) Hydroxybenzene Reaction Products of TETA and propylene oxide Tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA)  CAS #  29320-38-5 32610-77-8 112-24-3 108-95-2 26950-63-0 112-57-2  CONCENTRATION  < 25% < 25% < 15% < 12% < 12% < 12%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 3 Flammability - 1 Reactivity - 0  DANGER! Corrosive. Skin sensitizer. Moderate to severe skin, eye and respiratory tract irritant. May cause allergic reactions. Amber colored liquid with ammonia odor. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................... Skin contact, eye contact, inhalation. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION: ......................................... May cause respiratory tract irritation. Coughing and chest pain may result. CHRONIC INHALATION:.................................... May cause respiratory tract irritation, coughing, sore throat, shortness of breath or chest pain.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 2 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 205 Hardener  ACUTE SKIN CONTACT: .................................... May cause strong irritation, redness. Possible mild corrosion. CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: ............................... Prolonged or repeated contact may cause an allergic reaction and possible sensitization in susceptible individuals. May be absorbed in harmful amounts. EYE CONTACT: ..................................................... Moderate to severe irritation with possible tissue damage. Concentrated vapors can be absorbed in eye tissue and cause eye injury. Contact causes discomfort and possible corneal injury or conjunctivitis. INGESTION: ........................................................... Single dose oral toxicity is moderate. May cause gastrointestinal tract irritation and pain. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: .................. Respiratory tract irritation. Skin irritation and redness. Possible allergic reaction seen as hives and rash. Eye irritation. Possible liver and kidney disorders upon long term skin absorption overexposures. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Chronic respiratory disease, asthma. Eye disease. Skin disorders and allergies. 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES: ......................................... Immediately flush with water for at least 15 minutes. Get prompt medical attention. FIRST AID FOR SKIN:.......................................... Remove contaminated clothing. Immediately wash skin with soap and water. Do not apply greases or ointments. Get medical attention if severe exposure. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION: ......................... Move to fresh air and consult physician if effects occur. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION: ............................. Give conscious person at least 2 glasses of water. Do not induce vomiting. If vomiting should occur spontaneously, keep airway clear. Get medical attention. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ....................................................... >270°F (PMCC) EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................. Water fog, alcohol foam, carbon dioxide (CO2), dry chemical. FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARDS: .................. Burning will generate toxic fumes. When mixed with sawdust, wood chips, or other cellulosic material, spontaneous combustion can occur under certain conditions. If hardener is spilled into or mixed with sawdust, heat is generated as the air oxidizes the amine. If the heat is not dissipated quickly enough, it can ignite the sawdust. SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: .... Use full-body protective gear and a self-contained breathing apparatus. If spill has ignited, use water spray to disperse vapors and protect personnel attempting to stop leak. Use water to cool fire-exposed containers.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES:  Page 3 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 205 Hardener  SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES:....................... Stop leak without additional risk. Wear proper personal protective equipment. Dike and contain spill. Ventilate area. Large spill - dike and pump into appropriate container for recovery. Small spill - dilute with water and recover or use inert, non-combustible absorbent material (e.g., sand) and shovel into suitable container. Do not use sawdust, wood chips or other cellulosic materials to absorb the spill, as the possibility for spontaneous combustion exists. Wash spill residue with warm, soapy water if necessary. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.):.......... 40°F (4°C) / 90°F (32°C). SHELF LIFE:........................................................... Two years or more in original sealed container. STORAGE:............................................................... Store in cool, dry place away from high temperatures and moisture. Keep container tightly closed. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: .............................. Use with adequate ventilation. Do not breath vapors or mists from heated material. Avoid exposure to concentrated vapors. Avoid skin contact. Wash thoroughly after handling. When mixed with epoxy resin this product causes an exothermic reaction, which in large masses, can produce enough heat to damage or ignite surrounding materials and emit fumes and vapors that vary widely in composition and toxicity. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION: EYE PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................... Chemical splash-proof goggles or face shield. SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................. Wear liquid-proof, chemical resistant gloves (nitrilebutyl rubber, neoprene, butyl rubber or natural rubber) and full body-covering clothing. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION GUIDELINES: Use with adequate general and local exhaust ventilation to meet exposure limits. In poorly ventilated areas, use a NIOSH/MSHA approved respirator with an organic vapor cartridge. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES: Use where there is immediate access to safety shower and emergency eye wash. Wash thoroughly after use. Contact lens should not be worn when working with this material. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS: ........... Not established for product as whole. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients. 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM ................................................. Liquid. COLOR..................................................................... Amber. ODOR ....................................................................... Ammonia-like. BOILING POINT .................................................... > 440°F. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT.................... Approximately 23°F.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 4 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 205 Hardener  pH .............................................................................. Alkaline. SOLUBILITY IN WATER ..................................... Appreciable. SPECIFIC GRAVITY ............................................. 1.05 BULK DENSITY ..................................................... 8.85 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE ............................................... < 1 mmHg @ 20°C. VAPOR DENSITY .................................................. Heavier than air. VISCOSITY ............................................................. 1,000 cPs % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT................................. EPA Method 24, as described in 40 CFR Part 60, was used to determine the Volatile Matter Content of mixed epoxy resin and hardener. This method states that two-component coating systems should be tested by determining weight loss after mixing the individual components together at the proper ratio, dissolving them in an appropriate solvent, and subjecting them to a temperature of 230°F. 105 Resin and 205 Hardener, mixed together at 5:1 by weight, has a density of 1181 g/L (9.86 lbs/gal). The combined VOC content for 105/205 is 63.4 g/L (0.53 lbs/gal). 10. REACTIVITY: STABILITY: ............................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: .................. Will not occur. INCOMPATIBILITIES:......................................... Avoid excessive heat. Avoid acids, oxidizing materials, halogenated organic compounds (e.g., methylene chloride). External heating or self-heating could result in rapid temperature increase and serious hazard. If such a reaction were to take place in a waste drum, the drum could expand and rupture violently. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS: ........................ Very toxic fumes and gases when burned. Carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and oxides of nitrogen; ammonia when heated. 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No specific oral, inhalation or dermal toxicology data is known for this product. Oral: ................................................. Expected to be moderately toxic. Inhalation: ........................................ Expected to be moderately toxic. Dermal: ............................................ Expected to be moderately toxic. Adsorption of phenolic solutions through the skin may be very rapid and can cause death. Lesser exposures can cause damage to the kidney, liver, pancreas and spleen; and cause edema of the lungs. Chronic exposures can cause death from liver and kidney damage. CARCINOGENICITY: NTP ..................................................................... No. IARC ................................................................... No. OSHA .................................................................. No. This product contains no known carcinogens in concentrations of 0.1% or greater.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 5 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 205 Hardener  12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: Wastes from this product may present long term environmental hazards. Do not allow into sewers, on the ground or in any body of water. Hydroxybenzene (phenol) (CAS # 108-95-2) biodegradability = 99.5% at 7 days. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS: WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD: ........................... Evaluation of this product using RCRA criteria shows that it is not a hazardous waste, either by listing or characteristics, in its purchased form. It is the responsibility of the user to determine proper disposal methods. Incineration or landfill may be preferred methods when conducted in accordance with federal, state and local regulations. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME:..................................... Polyamines, liquid, corrosive, n.o.s. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME:......................... (Triethylenetetramine) D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ...................................... Class 8 U.N./N.A. NUMBER:............................................... UN 2735 PACKING GROUP:................................................ PG III 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ...................................................... Corrosive; possible sensitizer. TSCA STATUS: ....................................................... All components listed on TSCA Inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS: ........... This product contains hydroxybenzene (phenol) and is subject to the reporting requirements of Section 313 of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and 40 CFR Part 372. STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION:  The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc. COMPONENT NAME /CAS NUMBER Tetraethylenepentamine 112-57-2 Tetraethylenetriamine 112-24-3  Page 6 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 205 Hardener  CONCENTRATION  STATE CODE  <12% <15%  FL, MA, NJ, PA FL, MA, NJ, PA  16. OTHER INFORMATION: REASON FOR ISSUE: ........................................... Update in Section 16. PREPARED BY:...................................................... T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY: ..................................................... G. M. House TITLE: ...................................................................... Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE:................................................ January 5, 2004 SUPERSEDES DATE: ............................................ January 5, 2001 MSDS NUMBER: .................................................... 205-04a Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight; 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of Gougeon Brothers, Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. Gougeon Brothers, Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS #205-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  ",23);arrFiles[41]=new Array(42,"MSDS/MSDS207.pdf","3 Jul 2006","1","","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: ....................... WEST SYSTEM® 207 Special Coating Hardener PRODUCT CODE:........................ 207 CHEMICAL FAMILY: ................ Amine. CHEMICAL NAME:..................... Modified polyamine. FORMULA: ................................... Not applicable. MANUFACTURER: Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 100 Patterson Avenue Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 989-684-7286 EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC: .........800-424-9300 Non-transportation Poison Hotline: .......800-222-1222  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS INGREDIENT NAME  Polyoxypropylenediamine Reaction products of isophorone diamine with phenol/formaldehyde Isophoronediamine Reaction products of benzene-1,3-dimethaneamine with hydroxybenzene and formaldehyde Hydroxybenzene m-Xylene diamine  CAS #  9046-10-0 25265-17-2 2855-13-2 57214-10-5 108-95-2 1477-55-0  CONCENTRATION  25-50% < 25% < 25% <25% < 12% < 12%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 3 Flammability - 1 Reactivity - 0  DANGER! Corrosive. Severe eye irritant. Severe skin irritant. Severe respiratory irritant. May cause skin sensitization. Harmful if swallowed. Harmful if absorbed through the skin. Straw-yellow colored liquid, ammonia odor. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................... Skin contact, eye contact, inhalation. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION: ......................................... Exposure to high concentrations of vapor causes irritation to the respiratory tract. Coughing and chest pain may result. CHRONIC INHALATION:.................................... Prolonged or repeated exposure to high concentrations of vapors may cause lung tissue damage. Exposure to low vapor concentrations may cause a sore throat.  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 2 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 207 Hardener  ACUTE SKIN CONTACT: .................................... Moderately corrosive. Prolonged contact may cause skin damage with burns and blistering. Wide spread contact may result in material being absorbed in harmful amounts. CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: ............................... May cause persistent irritation or dermatitis. Repeated contact may cause allergic reaction/sensitization and possible skin tissue destruction. Repeated absorption may cause internal organ damage. EYE CONTACT: ..................................................... Causes severe irritation, pain and possible permanent injury. Vapor absorption into the eye can cause blurred vision and injury. INGESTION: ........................................................... Moderately toxic. May cause bleeding of the gastrointestinal tract. May cause burning of the mouth and throat. Aspiration hazard. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: .................. Development of allergic reaction or sensitization. Skin irritation and redness. Respiratory irritation or tightness of chest. Conjunctivitis or corneal damage. Internal organ compalications. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Chronic respiratory disease (e.g., bronchitis, asthma). Skin conditions and allergies. Eye disorders. 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES: ......................................... Immediately flush with water for at least 15 minutes. Get prompt medical attention. FIRST AID FOR SKIN:.......................................... Remove contaminated clothing. Immediately wash skin with soap and water. Do not apply greases or ointments. Get medical attention if severe exposure. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION: ......................... If symptoms occur as noted in Section 3, remove to fresh air. Get medical attention if symptoms persist or worsen. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION: ............................. Give conscious person at least 2 glasses of water. Do not induce vomiting. If vomiting should occur spontaneously, keep airway clear. Get medical attention. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ....................................................... > 200°F (PMCC) EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................. Water spray, dry chemical, alcohol foam and carbon dioxide (CO2). FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARDS: .................. Burning can generate toxic fumes. When mixed with sawdust, wood chips, or other cellulosic material, spontaneous combustion can occur under certain conditions. If hardener is spilled into or mixed with sawdust, heat is generated as the air oxidizes the amine. If the heat is not dissipated quickly enough, it can ignite the sawdust.  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 3 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 207 Hardener  SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: .... Use full-body protective gear and a self-contained breathing apparatus. If spill has ignited, use water spray to disperse vapors and protect personnel attempting to stop leak. Use water to cool fire-exposed containers. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES:....................... Stop leak without additional risk. Wear proper personal protective equipment. Dike and contain spill. Ventilate area. Large spill - dike and pump into appropriate container for recovery. Small spill - dilute with water and recover or use inert, non-combustible absorbent material (e.g., sand) and shovel into suitable container. Do not use sawdust, wood chips or other cellulosic materials to absorb the spill, as the possibility for spontaneous combustion exists. Wash spill residue with warm, soapy water if necessary. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.):.......... 40°F (4°C) / 90°F (32°C) SHELF LIFE:........................................................... Two years or more in the original sealed container. STORAGE:............................................................... Minimum feasible handling temperatures should be maintained. If stored above 100°F, nitrogen atmosphere is recommended. Keep containers tightly closed. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: .............................. Use only with adequate ventilation. Do not breath vapors or mists from heated material. Avoid contact with skin and eyes. Wash thoroughly after handling. When mixed with epoxy resin this product causes an exothermic reaction, which in large masses, can produce enough heat to damage or ignite surrounding materials and emit fumes and vapors that vary widely in composition and toxicity. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION: EYE PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................... Chemical splash goggles or full-face shield. SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................. Wear liquid-proof, chemical resistant gloves (nitrilebutyl rubber, neoprene, butyl rubber or natural rubber) and full body-covering clothing. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION GUIDELINES: General mechanical or local exhaust ventilation. In the absence of adequate ventilation, use a NIOSH approved air purifying respirator with an organic vapor cartridge. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES:...... Use where there is immediate access to safety shower and emergency eye wash. Provide proper wash/cleanup facilities for proper hygiene. Contact lens should not be worn when working with this material. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS: ........... Not established for product as whole. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients.  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 4 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 207 Hardener  9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM ................................................. Liquid. COLOR..................................................................... Yellow. ODOR ....................................................................... Ammonia-like. BOILING POINT .................................................... > 480°F. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT.................... No data. pH .............................................................................. 11.2 SOLUBILITY IN WATER ..................................... Appreciable. SPECIFIC GRAVITY ............................................. 1.01 BULK DENSITY ..................................................... 8.51 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE ............................................... < 1 mmHg @ 20°C. VAPOR DENSITY .................................................. Heavier than air. VISCOSITY ............................................................. 275 cPs. % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT................................. EPA Method 24, as described in 40 CFR Part 60, was used to determine the Volatile Matter Content of mixed epoxy resin and hardener. This method states that two-component coating systems should be tested by determining weight loss after mixing the individual components together at the proper ratio, dissolving them in an appropriate solvent, and subjecting them to a temperature of 230°F. 105 Resin and 207 Hardener, mixed together at 3:1 by weight, has a density of 1154 g/L (9.63 lbs/gal). The combined VOC content for 105/207 is 100.6 g/L (0.84 lbs/gal). 10. REACTIVITY: STABILITY: ............................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: .................. Will not occur. INCOMPATIBILITIES:......................................... Strong oxidizers, acids. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS: ........................ Ammonia, oxides of nitrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and possibly aldehydes and ketones. 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No specific oral, inhalation or dermal toxicology data is known for this product. Oral: ................................................. Expected to be moderately toxic. Inhalation: ........................................ Expected to be moderately toxic. Dermal: ............................................ Expected to be moderately toxic. Adsorption of phenolic solutions through the skin may be very rapid and can cause death. Lesser exposures can cause damage to the kidney, liver, pancreas and spleen; and cause edema of the lungs. Chronic exposures can cause death from liver and kidney damage. CARCINOGENICITY: NTP ..................................................................... No. IARC ................................................................... No. OSHA .................................................................. No. This product contains no known carcinogens in concentrations greater than 0.1%.  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 5 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 207 Hardener  12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: Environmental Fate 108-95-2 Phenol: Biodegradeability = 99.5% at 7 days.  Wastes from this product may present long term environmental hazards. Do not allow into sewers, on the ground or in any body of water. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS: WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD: ........................... Evaluation of this product using RCRA criteria shows that it is not a hazardous waste, either by listing or characteristics, in its purchased form. It is the responsibility of the user to determine proper disposal methods. Incineration or landfill may be preferred methods when conducted in accordance with federal, state and local regulations. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME:..................................... Polyamines, liquid, corrosive, n.o.s. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME:......................... Polyoxypropylenediamine D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ...................................... Class 8 U.N./N.A. NUMBER:............................................... UN 2735 PACKING GROUP:................................................ PG II 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ...................................................... Corrosive; irritant; possible sensitizer; liver or kidney toxin. TSCA STATUS: ....................................................... All components are listed on TSCA inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS: ........... This product contains hydroxybenzene (phenol) and is subject to the reporting requirements of Section 313 of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and 40 CFR Part 372. STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION:  The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state.  COMPONENT NAME /CAS NUMBER None. CONCENTRATION STATE CODE  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 16. OTHER INFORMATION:  Page 6 of 6  WEST SYSTEM® 207 Hardener  REASON FOR ISSUE: ........................................... Update in Section 16. PREPARED BY:...................................................... T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY: ..................................................... G. M. House TITLE: ...................................................................... Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE:................................................ January 5, 2004 SUPERSEDES DATE: ............................................ January 5, 2001 MSDS NUMBER: .................................................... 207-04a Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight; 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of Gougeon Brothers, Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. Gougeon Brothers, Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS #207-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  ",25);arrFiles[42]=new Array(43,"MSDS/MSDS209.pdf","3 Jul 2006","1.CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION","","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: ....................... WEST SYSTEM 209 Extra Slow Hardener PRODUCT CODE:........................ 209. CHEMICAL FAMILY: ................ Amine. CHEMICAL NAME:..................... Modified polyamine. FORMULA: ................................... Not applicable. MANUFACTURER: Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 100 Patterson Avenue Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 989-684-7286 EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC: .........800-424-9300 Non-transportation Poison Hotline: .......800-222-1222  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS  INGREDIENT NAME TOFA, reaction product with TEPA Polycycloaliphatic amine Polyoxypropylenediamine Isophorone diamine 4,4 \'-Methylenebiscyclohexane Tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA) Benzene-1,3-dimethaneamine Modified amine CAS # 68953-36-6 trade secret 9046-10-0 2855-13-2 1761-71-3 112-57-2 1477-55-0 trade secret CONCENTRATION < 50% < 25% < 25% < 25% < 15% < 15% < 15% < 15%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 3 Flammability - 1 Reactivity - 0  DANGER! Corrosive. Severe eye irritant. Severe skin irritant. Severe respiratory irritant. May cause skin sensitization. Harmful if swallowed. Harmful if in contact with skin. Yellow colored liquid with ammonia odor. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................... Skin contact, eye contact, inhalation. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION: ......................................... Exposure to high concentrations of vapor causes irritation to the respiratory tract. Coughing and chest pain may result. CHRONIC INHALATION:.................................... Prolonged or repeated exposure to high concentrations of vapors may cause lung tissue damage. Exposure to low vapor concentrations may cause a sore throat.  MSDS #209-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 2 of 5  WEST SYSTEM 209 Extra Slow Hardener  ACUTE SKIN CONTACT: .................................... Corrosive. Prolonged contact may cause skin damage with burns and blistering. Wide spread contact may result in material being absorbed in harmful amounts. CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: ............................... May cause persistent irritation or dermatitis. Repeated contact may cause allergic reaction/sensitization and possible skin tissue destruction. Repeated absorption may cause internal organ damage. EYE CONTACT: ..................................................... Corrosive. Causes irritation and may cause chemical burns resulting in permanent damage. Vapors may cause blurred vision when absorbed into eye tissue. INGESTION: ........................................................... Corrosive. Causes burning of the mouth and throat. May cause bleeding of the gastrointestinal tract and vomiting. Aspiration hazard. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: .................. Persistent irritation or dermatitis. Skin sensitization or allergic reaction. Irritation to the respiratory tract, headache, nausea. Redness and swelling of the eye. Liver or kidney damage. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Existing skin and respiratory conditions (allergies, dermatitis, asthma, bronchitis). 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES: ......................................... Immediately flush with water for at least 15 minutes. Get prompt medical attention. FIRST AID FOR SKIN:.......................................... Remove contaminated clothing. Immediately wash skin with soap and water. Do not apply greases or ointments. Get medical attention if severe exposure. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION: ......................... If symptoms occur as noted in Section 3, remove to fresh air. Get medical attention if symptoms persist or worsen. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION: ............................. Give conscious person at least 2 glasses of water. Do not induce vomiting. If vomiting should occur spontaneously, keep airway clear. Get medical attention. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ....................................................... > 200°F. EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................. Water spray, dry chemical, alcohol foam and carbon dioxide (CO2). FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARDS: .................. Burning will generate toxic fumes. When mixed with sawdust, wood chips, or other cellulosic material, spontaneous combustion can occur under certain conditions. If hardener is spilled into or mixed with sawdust, heat is generated as the air oxidizes the amine. If the heat is not dissipated quickly enough, it can ignite the sawdust.  MSDS #209-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 3 of 5  WEST SYSTEM 209 Extra Slow Hardener  SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: .... Use full-body protective gear and a self-contained breathing apparatus. If spill has ignited, use water spray to disperse vapors and protect personnel attempting to stop leak. Use water to cool fire-exposed containers. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES:....................... Stop leak without additional risk. Wear proper personal protective equipment. Dike and contain spill. Ventilate area. Large spill - dike and pump into appropriate container for recovery. Small spill - dilute with water and recover or use inert, non-combustible absorbent material (e.g., sand) and shovel into suitable container. Do not use sawdust, wood chips or other cellulosic materials to absorb the spill, as the possibility for spontaneous combustion exists. Wash spill residue with warm, soapy water if necessary. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.):.......... 40°F (4°C) / 90°F (32°C). SHELF LIFE:........................................................... 24 months or longer in original sealed container. STORAGE:............................................................... Minimum feasible handling temperatures should be maintained. If stored above 100°F, nitrogen atmosphere is recommended. Keep containers tightly closed. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: .............................. Use only with adequate ventilation. Do not breath vapors or mists from heated material. Avoid contact with skin and eyes. Wash thoroughly after handling. When mixed with epoxy resin this product causes an exothermic reaction, which in large masses, can produce enough heat to damage or ignite surrounding materials and emit fumes and vapors that vary widely in composition and toxicity. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION: EYE PROTECTION REQUIREMENTS: ............ Chemical splash goggles or full-face shield. SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................. Wear liquid-proof, chemical resistant gloves (nitrilebutyl rubber, neoprene, butyl rubber or natural rubber) and full body-covering clothing. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION REQUIREMENTS: General mechanical or local exhaust ventilation. In the absence of adequate ventilation controls, use a NIOSH approved air purifying respirator with an organic vapor cartridge. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES:...... Use where there is immediate access to safety shower and emergency eye wash. Provide proper wash/cleanup facilities for proper hygiene. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS: ........... Not established for product as whole. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients. 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM ................................................. Liquid. COLOR..................................................................... Yellow.  MSDS #209-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc.  Page 4 of 5  WEST SYSTEM 209 Extra Slow Hardener  ODOR ....................................................................... Ammonia-like. BOILING POINT .................................................... > 480°F. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT.................... No data. pH .............................................................................. 11.5 SOLUBILITY IN WATER ..................................... Appreciable. SPECIFIC GRAVITY ............................................. 0.963 BULK DENSITY ..................................................... 8.04 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE ............................................... < 1 mmHg @ 20°C. VAPOR DENSITY .................................................. Heavier than air. VISCOSITY ............................................................. 85 cP. % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT................................. EPA Method 24, as described in 40 CFR Part 60, was used to determine the Volatile Matter Content of mixed epoxy resin and hardener. This method states that two-component coating systems should be tested by determining weight loss after mixing the individual components together at the proper ratio, dissolving them in an appropriate solvent, and subjecting them to a temperature of 230°F. 105 Resin and 209 Hardener, mixed together at 3:1 by weight, has a density of 1148 g/L (9.58 lbs/gal). The combined VOC content for 105/209 is 88.2 g/L (0.74 lbs/gal). 10. REACTIVITY: STABILITY: ............................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: .................. Will not occur. INCOMPATIBILITIES:......................................... Strong oxidants, acids. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS: ........................ Burning will produce toxic fumes. 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No specific oral, inhalation or dermal toxicology data is known for this product. Oral: ................................................. Expected to be moderately toxic. Inhalation: ........................................ Expected to be moderately toxic. Dermal: ............................................ Expected to be moderately toxic CARCINOGENICITY: NTP ..................................................................... No. IARC ................................................................... No. OSHA .................................................................. No. This product contains no known carcinogens in concentrations greater than 0.1%. 12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: Wastes from this product may present long term environmental hazards. Do not allow into sewers, on the ground or in any body of water.  MSDS #209-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  Gougeon Brothers, Inc. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS:  Page 5 of 5  WEST SYSTEM 209 Extra Slow Hardener  WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD: ........................... Incineration or energy recovery (fuel blending) may be preferred methods when conducted in accordance with federal, state and local regulations. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME:..................................... Polyamines, liquid, corrosive, n.o.s. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME:......................... (Polyoxypropylenediamine) D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ...................................... Class 8 U.N./N.A. NUMBER:............................................... UN 2735 PACKING GROUP:................................................ PG III 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ...................................................... Corrosive; severe irritant; possible sensitizer. TSCA STATUS: ....................................................... All components are listed on TSCA inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS: ........... None. STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION:  The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state.  COMPONENT NAME None known. CONCENTRATION STATE CODE  16. OTHER INFORMATION: REASON FOR ISSUE: ........................................... Update in 16. PREPARED BY:...................................................... T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY: ..................................................... G. M. House TITLE: ...................................................................... Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE:................................................ January 5, 2004 SUPERSEDES DATE: ............................................ January 5, 2001 MSDS NUMBER: .................................................... 209-04a. Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight; 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of Gougeon Brothers, Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. Gougeon Brothers, Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS #209-04a  Last Revised: 05JAN04  ",23);arrFiles[43]=new Array(44,"MSDS/pigment.htm","12 Dec 2009","Pigment MSDS","","","CLUB KIT INC MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET 4242 31st Street North St. Petersburg , FL 33714 727 823 6230 Technical information: 727 823 6230                                                                                                                                                  Date prepared: April 27, 2004 Emergency information :: Chemtel 800-255-3924 In the event of a chemical emergency involving a spill, leak, tire, exposure or accident call the emergency number listed above. Read the MSDS, technical bulletin, label and the safety information prior to use. 1. Chemical PRODUCT INFORMATION Product Name: Pigments ,, various colors 2 INGREDIENTS This product, as supplied is not hazardous by the definition of Hazard Determination 29 CFR 1910 1200. 3. PHYSICAL DATA Boiling Range: N/A. Vapor Density : Heavier than air Evaporation Rate: Slower than ether Percent Volatile (by volume): Negligible Weight per Gallon: 9.33# 4. FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD DATA Flash Point; Greater than 2OO F ( TCC ) LEL: See section 2 Extinguishing Media: Use carbon dioxide or dry chemical extinguishers for small fires. Use foam for large fires. Unusual Fire and Explosion Hazards: Closed containers may build explosive pressure from heat. Never use welding or cutting torch on or near drum, even empty. Special Firefighting Procedure: Cool closed containers with water spray. 5. HEALTH HAZARDS DATA Threshold Limits Value: See section 2 Effects of Overexposure Eyes: Can cause irritation, redness, tearing Skin: Prolonged or repeated contact can cause slight irritation Ingestion: Can cause gastrointestinal irritation First Aid Skin: Thoroughly wash exposed area with soap and water. Remove contaminated clothing. Launder before reuse. Eyes; Flush with large quantities of water, lifting upper and lower lids Occasionally , get medical attention. Ingestion: induce vomiting, keep person warm, quiet and get medical attention immediately. Give 2 glasses of water if conscious. Never give anything by mouth to an unconscious person. Not listed as a carcinogen by NTP, LARC and OSHA. 6. REACTIVITY DATA I Stability: Stable Conditions to Avoid: Excessive heat Incompatibility: (Materials to avoid) Strong oxidizing agents, acids and peroxides Hazardous Decomposition Products: Thermal decomposition may produce carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, low weight molecular weight hydrocarbons, organic acids. Hazardous Polymerization: May occur 7. SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES I Response to Small Spills: Stop discharge and contain spill. Recover with pumping equipment, commercial absorbents, vermiculite or other inert absorbent materials. Place in appropriate container(s) for further handling Response to Large Spills: Stop discharge and contain spill or contaminated material using dike, harrier or other means. Recover with vacuum truck, absorbents or other means. Place contaminated material in suitable container(s) for further handling. Hazards to Avoid: Do not flush to stream, other bodies of water or sewer. Avoid contact with skin or clothing. Other hazards see sections 4 and 5. Disposal Methods Recycle, if feasible • incinerate at authorized facility • Treatment at Industrial or Liquid Waste Treatment facility • Landfill after solidification in a facility authorized to receive waste Note: This material, if being discarded, should be disposed in accordance with local, state and federal regulation. 8. PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT TO BE USED Respiratory Protection: None required Ventilation: Provide sufficient mechanical (general and/or local exhaust) ventilation Protective Cloves: Wear resistant gloves Eye Protection: Chemical splash goggles in compliance with OSHA regulations are advised; however, OSHA. regulations also permit other type safety glasses. Consult your safety equipment supplier. Other Protective Equipment: To prevent repeated or prolonged skin contact, wear impervious clothing and hoots. Also, have eye bath and safety shower available. 9.. SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS OR OTHER COMMENTS I Precautions; Avoid contact with skin and eyes. Do not take internally. The information contained herein is, to the best of our knowledge and belief: accurate. However, since the conditions of handling and use are beyond our control, we make no guarantee of results and assume no liability for damages incurred by use of this material. All chemicals may present unknown health hazards and should be used with caution, Although certain, hazards are described herein, we cannot guarantee that these are ‘the only hazards which exist. Final determination of suitability of the chemical is the sole responsibility of the user. Users of any chemical should satisfy themselves that the conditions and methods of use assure that the chemical is used safely. No representations of warranties, either express or implied, of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose or any other nature are made hereunder with respect to the information contained herein or the chemical to which the information refers. It is the responsibility of the user to comply with all applicable federal, state and local laws and regulations. Nothing contained herein is to be construed as a recommendation for use in violation of any patents or of applicable laws or regulations. ",12);arrFiles[44]=new Array(45,"MSDS/MSDSGraphitePowder.pdf","3 Jul 2006","MSDS for West System 423 Graphite Powder","Graphite Powder","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET West System Inc.  1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: ....................... WEST SYSTEM® 423TM Graphite Powder. PRODUCT CODE: ........................ 423 CHEMICAL FAMILY:................. Carbon. CHEMICAL NAME:..................... Natural Graphite. FORMULA:.................................... C MANUFACTURER: West System Inc. 102 Patterson Ave. Bay City, MI 48706, U.S.A. Phone: 866-937-8797 or 989-684-7286 www.westsystem.com EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS: Transportation CHEMTREC: .........800-424-9300 (U.S.) 703-527-3887 (International) Non-transportation Poison Hotline: .......800-222-1222  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS INGREDIENT NAME  Graphite (the crystalline allotropic form of Carbon) Silica (crystalline)  CAS#  7782-42-5 14808-60-7  CONCENTRATION  96 - 100% 0 - 4%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION  EMERGENCY OVERVIEW HMIS Hazard Rating: Health - 1 Flammability - 0 Reactivity - 0  DANGER! Possible cancer hazard. Nuisance dust. Avoid inhalation of airborne dust. Black/gray odorless solid. PRIMARY ROUTE(S) OF ENTRY: ..................... Inhalation. POTENTIAL HEALTH EFFECTS: ACUTE INHALATION: ......................................... If exposure limits are exceeded, the respiratory tract may become irritated. May cause shortness of breath, coughing and/or chest tightness due to temporary physical overloading of the lungs. CHRONIC INHALATION:.................................... Prolonged or repeated inhalation of dust may cause pulmonary fibrosis or emphysema. Possible lung cancer hazard. ACUTE SKIN CONTACT:..................................... Mild irritation.  MSDS# 423-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 2 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 423TM  CHRONIC SKIN CONTACT: ............................... No evidence of long-term health effects. EYE CONTACT: ..................................................... Moderate irritation. INGESTION:............................................................ No information. SYMPTOMS OF OVEREXPOSURE: .................. Respiratory irritation, shortness of breath or coughing. Red, irritated skin. Eye irritation. MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Emphysema, asthma or other respiratory conditions. 4. FIRST AID MEASURES: FIRST AID FOR EYES: ......................................... Flush adequately with water to remove particles. If discomfort persists, seek medical advice. FIRST AID FOR SKIN: .......................................... Wash with soap and water. FIRST AID FOR INHALATION:.......................... Remove to fresh air if effects occur. If effects persists, seek medical advice. FIRST AID FOR INGESTION: ............................. No information. 5. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES: FLASH POINT: ....................................................... Not applicable. EXTINGUISHING MEDIA: .................................. Water. SPECIAL FIRE FIGHTING PROCEDURES: Spray with water. 6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES: SPILL OR LEAK PROCEDURES: ....................... Sweep and shovel or use properly grounded vacuum equipment. Do so in a manner that minimizes airborne dust. 7. HANDLING AND STORAGE: STORAGE TEMPERATURE (min./max.): .......... 0°F (-17°C)/100°F (38°C). STORAGE:............................................................... Keep away from oxidizing agents. HANDLING PRECAUTIONS: .............................. Avoid handling that will unnecessarily generate airborne dust. Graphite is a good conductor of electricity. Exercise caution when handling in areas where contact with electrical circuitry is possible. 8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS/PERSONAL PROTECTION:  MSDS# 423-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 3 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 423TM  EYE PROTECTION GUIDELINES: .................... Safety glasses or goggles are recommended, depending on the expected level of exposure. SKIN PROTECTION GUIDELINES:................... Areas expected to have repeated exposure, such as hands, may need to be protected by an impervious material to prevent dryness and irritation. Barrier creams can be used effectively. RESPIRATORY/VENTILATION GUIDELINES: Work environments should be maintained below applicable exposure level through the use of engineering controls, such as dilution and exhaust ventilation. If this is not feasible, use a NIOSH approved dust mask/respirator for nuisance dust. ADDITIONAL PROTECTIVE MEASURES: Practice good industrial hygiene by washing with soap and water after each use. Avoid excessive inhalation. OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS: ........... This product should be treated as a nuisance dust. Refer to OSHA \'s Permissible Exposure Level (PEL) or the ACGIH Guidelines for information on specific ingredients. 9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES: PHYSICAL FORM.................................................. Powder. COLOR..................................................................... Gray/Black. ODOR........................................................................ Odorless. BOILING POINT .................................................... No data. MELTING POINT/FREEZE POINT .................... Sublimes at 3650°C. pH .............................................................................. No data. SOLUBILITY IN WATER ..................................... Insoluble. SPECIFIC GRAVITY ............................................. 1.80 to 2.25 BULK DENSITY ..................................................... 3.755 pounds/gallon. VAPOR PRESSURE................................................ Not applicable. VAPOR DENSITY................................................... Not applicable. % VOLATILE BY WEIGHT ................................. Zero. 10. REACTIVITY: STABILITY: ............................................................ Stable. HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: .................. Will not occur. INCOMPATIBILITIES: ......................................... Oxidizing agents. DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS:......................... Carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO2). 11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No information. CARCINOGENICITY: NTP ..................................................................... Yes (crystalline silica, present at 0 - 4%) IARC ................................................................... Yes (crystalline silica, present at 0 - 4%)  MSDS# 423-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 4 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 423TM  OSHA .................................................................. No. International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) Monograph Vol. 68, 1997, concludes that there is sufficient evidence that inhaled crystilline silica causes cancer in humans. IARC Classification is Group 1. 12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION: No information. 13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS: WASTE DISPOSAL METHOD: This material is determined not to be a hazardous waste as per RCRA standards, either by listing or characteristics. Disposer must comply with all federal, state and local laws. Landfill is the preferred disposal method. 14. TRANSPORTATION INFORMATION: D.O.T. SHIPPING NAME: ..................................... Not regulated by D.O.T. TECHNICAL SHIPPING NAME:......................... Not applicable. D.O.T. HAZARD CLASS: ...................................... Not applicable. U.N./N.A. NUMBER:............................................... Not applicable. PACKING GROUP: ................................................ Not applicable. 15. REGULATORY INFORMATION: OSHA STATUS: ...................................................... Hazardous. Nuisance dust. Possible carcinogen. TSCA STATUS: ....................................................... All components are listed on TSCA Inventory. SARA TITLE III: SECTION 313 TOXIC CHEMICALS ............ None. STATE REGULATORY INFORMATION:  The following chemicals are specifically listed or otherwise regulated by individual states. For details on your regulatory requirements you should contact the appropriate agency in your state.  COMPONENT NAME /CAS NUMBER Crystalline Silica 14808-60-7 CONCENTRATION STATE CODE  1  0 -4%  CA  1.  These substances are known to the state of California to cause cancer or reproductive harm, or both.  16. OTHER INFORMATION: REASON FOR ISSUE:............................................ Update in Section 1. PREPARED BY: ...................................................... T. J. Atkinson APPROVED BY: ..................................................... G. M. House TITLE: ...................................................................... Health, Safety & Environmental Manager APPROVAL DATE: ................................................ January 3, 2005 SUPERSEDES DATE: ............................................ January 5, 2004  MSDS# 423-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  West System Inc.  Page 5 of 5  WEST SYSTEM® 423TM  MSDS NUMBER: .................................................... 423-05a Note: The Hazardous Material Indexing System (HMIS), cited in the Emergency Overview of Section 3, uses the following index to assess hazard rating: 0 = Minimal; 1 = Slight; 2 = Moderate; 3 = Serious; and 4 = Severe.  This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is accurate to the best knowledge of West System Inc. The data on this sheet is related only to the specific material designated herein. West System Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for use or reliance upon these data.  MSDS# 423-05a  Last Revised: 03JAN05  ",36);arrFiles[45]=new Array(46,"MSDS/FMS-MSDS.pdf","3 Jul 2006","FMS-MSDS","","","Material Safety Data Sheet  Revision Date: 09/25/2003 1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION  Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT Mold Release Product type: Company address: Henkel Corporation 1001 Trout Brook Crossing Rocky Hill, Connecticut 06067 Item No. : 38412 Region: United States Contact Information: Telephone: 860.571.5100 Emergency telephone: 860.571.5100 Internet: www.loctite.com  Issue date: 11/17/2004  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON INGREDIENTS  Hazardous components Hydrotreated heavy naphtha 64742-48-9 Dibutyl Ether 142-96-1 Octane 111-65-9  % 60-100  ACGIH TLV None  OSHA PEL None  OTHER None  10-30  None  None  None  1-5  None  2350 mg/m³ TWA 500 ppm TWA  None  Non hazardous components Proprietary resin blend less than 5% NJ TSRN 06-070-1067-5411P  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW  HMIS: Physical state: Color: Odor: Liquid Colorless Mild, Solvent HEALTH: FLAMMABILITY: PHYSICAL HAZARD: Personal Protection: 1 3 0 See Section 8  WARNING:  FLAMMABLE LIQUID AND VAPOR. CAUSES EYE, SKIN AND RESPIRATORY TRACT IRRITATION  Skin, inhalation, eyes  Relevant routes of exposure: Potential Health Effects Inhalation: Skin contact: Eye contact: Ingestion: Existing conditions aggravated by exposure:  Vapors and mists will irritate nose and throat and possibly eyes. Prolonged or repeated contact may cause irritation. Moderate eye irritation. May be harmful if swallowed. Skin disorders.  See Section 11 for additional toxicological information. Item No. : 38412 1 of 5 Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT  4. FIRST AID MEASURES  Inhalation: Skin contact:  Remove to fresh air. If discomfort persists seek medical attention. Immediately flush skin with plenty of water (using soap, if available). Remove contaminated clothing and shoes. Wash clothing before reuse. If skin irritation persists, call a physician. In the case of contact with eyes, rinse immediately with plenty of water and seek medical advice. Keep individual calm. Do not induce vomiting: contains petroleum distillates and/or aromatic solvents. DO NOT induce vomiting unless directed to do so by medical personnel. Get medical attention immediately.  Eye contact: Ingestion:  5. FIRE-FIGHTING MEASURES  Flash point: Autoignition temperature: Flammable/Explosive limits-lower %: Flammable/Explosive limits-upper %: Extinguishing media: Special fire fighting procedures: 31°C (87.8°F) Not available Not available Not available Foam, dry chemical or carbon dioxide. Wear self-contained breathing apparatus and full protective clothing, such as turn-out gear. Use water spray to keep fire exposed containers cool. Containers exposed to fire should be cooled with water to prevent vapor pressure buildup which could result in container rupture. If a leak or spill has not ignited use water spray to disperse vapors. The liquid is volatile and gives off invisible vapors. Oxides of carbon. Acrid smoke and fumes.  Unusual fire or explosion hazards:  Hazardous combustion products:  6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES  Environmental precautions: Clean-up methods: Do not allow material to contaminate ground water system. Maintain good ventilation for large spills. Remove all ignition sources. Soak up with inert absorbent material (e.g. sand, silica gel, acid binder, universal binder, sawdust). Keep in suitable and closed containers for disposal.  7. HANDLING AND STORAGE  Handling: Keep away from heat, spark and flame. Keep container closed. Avoid contact with eyes, skin and clothing. Do not wear contact lenses. Store away from heat, sparks, flames, or other sources of ignition. Keep container closed. Store at or below 48.8°C (120°F). Oxidizing and spontaneously flammable products. For information on product shelf life contact Henkel Customer Service at (800) 243-4874.  Storage:  Incompatible products:  8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS / PERSONAL PROTECTION  Engineering controls: Respiratory protection: Item No. : 38412 Ensure adequate ventilation, especially in confined areas. Use a NIOSH approved respirator if ventilation is inadequate. Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT 2 of 5  Skin protection:  Use chemical resistant, impermeable clothing including gloves and either an apron or body suit to prevent skin contact. Chemical splash goggles or safety glasses with side shields. See Section 2 for exposure limits.  Eye/face protection:  9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES  Physical state: Color: Odor: Vapor pressure: pH: Boiling point/range: Melting point/range: Specific gravity: Vapor density: Evaporation rate: Solubility in water: Partition coefficient (n-octanol/water): VOC content: Liquid Colorless Mild, Solvent Not available Not applicable 140°C (285°F) Not available .755 Heavier than air Slower than ether. Solubility in water: Slight Not available 99.24%; 749 grams/liter  10. STABILITY AND REACTIVITY  Stability: Hazardous polymerization: Hazardous decomposition products: Incompatability: Conditions to avoid: Stable. Will not occur. None under normal use. Oxidizing agents. Heat, flames and sparks. High temperatures.  11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION  Carcinogen Status Hazardous components Hydrotreated heavy naphtha 64742-48-9 Dibutyl Ether 142-96-1 Octane 111-65-9 NTP Carcinogen No No No IARC Carcinogen No No No OSHA Carcinogen No No No  Literature Referenced Target Organ & Other Health Effects Hazardous components Hydrotreated heavy naphtha 64742-48-9 Dibutyl Ether 142-96-1 Octane 111-65-9 Health Effects/Target Organs Irritant Irritant No Target Organs  12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION  Item No. :  38412 3 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT  Ecological information:  No specific studies have been conducted by Henkel on the ecotoxicity or environmental fate of this material; however, commonly available data on the material indicate that uncontrolled releases to soil, groundwater, or surface waters could entail acute and/or chronic ecological effects, depending on the quantity and concentration of such releases. Releases of volatile components to the atmosphere are not believed to entail significant ecological consequences provided such releases are within the exposure levels set forth in this document. Accordingly, all appropriate measures should be taken to avoid uncontrolled releases to the environment, and any spills or other uncontrolled releases which may occur should be contained and cleaned up immediately in accordance with Section 6.  13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS  Information provided is for unused product only. Recommended method of disposal: Recommended method of disposal: Dispose of according to Federal, State and local governmental regulations. Not available  EPA hazardous waste number:  14. TRANSPORT INFORMATION  U.S. Department of Transportation Ground (49 CFR): Proper shipping name: RESIN SOLUTION Hazard class or division: 3 Identification number: UN 1866 Packing group: III International Air Transportation (ICAO/IATA): Proper shipping name: RESIN SOLUTION Hazard class or division: 3 Identification number: UN 1866 Packing group: III WaterTransportation (IMO/IMDG): Proper shipping name: Hazard class or division: Identification number: Packing group: Marine pollutant:  RESIN SOLUTION 3 UN 1866 III None known  15. REGULATORY INFORMATION  United States Regulatory Information TSCA 8 (b) Inventory Status: TSCA 12 (b) Export Notification: CERCLA/SARA Section 302 EHS: CERCLA/SARA Section 311/312: CERCLA/SARA 313: California Proposition 65: All components are listed or are exempt from listing on the Toxic Substances Control Act Inventory. None. None. None. None. Benzene (CAS# 71-43-2). Trace. Toluene (CAS# 108-88-3). Trace.  Canada Regulatory Information  CEPA DSL/NDSL Status: WHMIS hazard class:  One or more components are not listed on, and are not exempt from listing on either the Domestic Substances List or the Non-Domestic Substances List. B.2, D.2.A, D.2.B  Item No. :  38412 4 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT  16. OTHER INFORMATION  This material safety data sheet contains changes from the previous version in sections: New Material Safety Data Sheet format. Prepared by: Lou Fabrizio, Senior Health & Regulatory Affairs Specialist  DISCLAIMER: The data contained herein are furnished for information only and are believed to be reliable. However, Henkel Corporation does not assume responsibility for any results obtained by persons over whose methods Henkel Corporation has no control. It is the user \'s responsibility to determine the suitability of Henkel \'s products or any production methods mentioned herein for a particular purpose, and to adopt such precautions as may be advisable for the protection of property and persons against any hazards that may be involved in the handling and use of any of Henkel Corporation \'s products. In light of the foregoing, Henkel Corporation specifically disclaims all warranties, express or implied, including warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, arising from sale or use of Henkel Corporation \'s products. Henkel Corporation further disclaims any liability for consequential or incidental damages of any kind, including lost profits.  Item No. :  38412 5 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE FMS/PINT  ",21);arrFiles[46]=new Array(47,"MSDS/770-NC.pdf","3 Jul 2006","770-NC","","","Material Safety Data Sheet  Revision Date: 07/19/2005 1. CHEMICAL PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION  Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML Product type: Mold Release Company address: Henkel Corporation 1001 Trout Brook Crossing Rocky Hill, Connecticut 06067 Item No. : 83469 Region: United States Contact Information: Telephone: 860.571.5100 Emergency telephone: 860.571.5100 Internet: www.loctite.com  Issue date: 07/23/2005  2. COMPOSITION/INFORMATION ON INGREDIENTS  Hazardous components Naphtha(petroleum), light alkylate 64741-66-8 Liquefied petroleum gas 68476-85-7  % 60-100  ACGIH TLV None  OSHA PEL None  OTHER None  10-30  Stoddard solvent 8052-41-3 Xylene 1330-20-7 Ethyl benzene 100-41-4 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene 95-63-6  1-5  1000 ppm TWA listed under aliphatic hydrocarbon gases alkane C1-C4 100 ppm TWA  1000 ppm TWA 1800 mg/m³ TWA  None  2900 mg/m³ TWA 500 ppm TWA 100 ppm TWA 435 mg/m³ TWA 100 ppm TWA 435 mg/m³ TWA None  None  0.1-1  100 ppm TWA 150 ppm STEL 100 ppm TWA 125 ppm STEL 25 ppm TWA  None  0.1-1  None  0.1-1  None  Non hazardous components Proprietary resin blend less than 5%  3. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION EMERGENCY OVERVIEW  HMIS: Physical state: Color: Odor: Aerosol Colorless Slight, Solvent HEALTH: FLAMMABILITY: PHYSICAL HAZARD: Personal Protection: 1 3 0 See Section 8  WARNING:  FLAMMABLE LIQUID AND VAPOR. HARMFUL IF INHALED. CAUSES EYE, SKIN AND RESPIRATORY TRACT IRRITATION  Skin, Inhalation, Eyes  Relevant routes of exposure: Potential Health Effects Inhalation: Skin contact: Item No. : 83469  Vapors and mists will irritate nose and throat and possibly eyes. May cause skin irritation with discomfort or rash. Repeated or prolonged contact can result in drying of skin. Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML 1 of 5  Eye contact: Ingestion: Existing conditions aggravated by exposure:  Vapors may irritate eyes. Contact with eyes will cause irritation. Harmful if swallowed. Other pre-existing skin conditions.  See Section 11 for additional toxicological information.  4. FIRST AID MEASURES  Inhalation: Skin contact:  Remove to fresh air. If discomfort persists seek medical attention. Immediately flush skin with plenty of water (using soap, if available). Remove contaminated clothing and shoes. Get medical attention if symptoms occur. Rinse immediately with plenty of water, also under the eyelids, for at least 15 minutes. Get medical attention. Keep individual calm. Do not induce vomiting. Obtain medical attention.  Eye contact:  Ingestion:  5. FIRE-FIGHTING MEASURES  Flash point: Autoignition temperature: Flammable/Explosive limits-lower %: Flammable/Explosive limits-upper %: Extinguishing media: Special fire fighting procedures: Flammable by flame extension Not available Not available Not available Use dry chemical, CO2, water spray or `alcohol` foam. Wear self-contained breathing apparatus and full protective clothing, such as turn-out gear. Water should be used to cool closed containers to prevent pressure build-up and possible autoignition or explosion when exposed to extreme heat. Closed containers may rupture (due to build up of pressure) when exposed to extreme heat. Oxides of carbon. Oxides of nitrogen. Acrid smoke and fumes.  Unusual fire or explosion hazards: Hazardous combustion products:  6. ACCIDENTAL RELEASE MEASURES  Environmental precautions: Remove sources of ignition. Prevent further leakage or spillage if safe to do so. Do not allow material to contaminate ground water system. Spilled liquid is combustible and can be ignited by heat, flames, sparks, or other sources of ignition. Soak up with inert absorbent material (e.g. sand, silica gel, acid binder, universal binder, sawdust). Store in a closed metal container until ready for disposal.  Clean-up methods:  Item No. :  83469 2 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML  7. HANDLING AND STORAGE  Handling: Use only in area provided with appropriate exhaust ventilation. Keep away from heat, spark and flame. Use only with adequate ventilation. Do not get in eyes. Do not get on skin or clothing. Store away from heat, sparks, flames, or other sources of ignition. Keep in a cool, well ventilated area. Store in original container until ready to use. Oxidizing and spontaneously flammable products. For information on product shelf life contact Henkel Customer Service at (800) 243-4874.  Storage:  Incompatible products:  8. EXPOSURE CONTROLS / PERSONAL PROTECTION  Engineering controls: Ensure adequate ventilation, especially in confined areas. Work should be done in an adequately ventilated area (i.e., ventilation sufficient to maintain concentrations below one half of the PEL and other relevant standards). Local exhaust ventilation is recommended when general ventilation is not sufficient to control airborne contamination. In case of mist, spray or aerosol exposure wear suitable personal respiratory protection and protective suit. Use NIOSH approved respirator if there is potential to exceed exposure limit(s). Use impermeable gloves and protective clothing as necessary to prevent skin contact. Chemical splash goggles or safety glasses with side shields. See Section 2 for exposure limits.  Respiratory protection:  Skin protection: Eye/face protection:  9. PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES  Physical state: Color: Odor: Vapor pressure: pH: Boiling point/range: Melting point/range: Specific gravity: Vapor density: Evaporation rate: Solubility in water: Partition coefficient (n-octanol/water): VOC content: Aerosol Colorless Slight, Solvent Greater than 2000 mm Hg Not applicable Not available Not available .712 Heavier than air Not available Not available Not available 90.55%; 644 grams/liter  10. STABILITY AND REACTIVITY  Stability: Hazardous polymerization: Hazardous decomposition products: Incompatability: Conditions to avoid: Stable. Will not occur. Thermal decomposition can lead to release of irritating gases and vapors. Oxidizing agents. Heat, flames and sparks.  11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION  Carcinogen Status  Item No. :  83469 3 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML  Hazardous components Naphtha(petroleum), light alkylate 64741-66-8 Liquefied petroleum gas 68476-85-7 Stoddard solvent 8052-41-3 Xylene 1330-20-7 Ethyl benzene 100-41-4 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene 95-63-6  NTP Carcinogen No No No No No No  IARC Carcinogen No No No No Group 2B No  OSHA Carcinogen No No No No Yes No  Literature Referenced Target Organ & Other Health Effects Hazardous components Naphtha(petroleum), light alkylate 64741-66-8 Liquefied petroleum gas 68476-85-7 Stoddard solvent 8052-41-3 Xylene 1330-20-7 Ethyl benzene 100-41-4 1,2,4-Trimethylbenzene 95-63-6 Health Effects/Target Organs No data Central nervous system, Lung, Irritant, Cardiac, Skin Central nervous system, Irritant Cardiac, Central nervous system, Irritant, Kidney, Liver Central nervous system, Irritant Central nervous system, Irritant, Respiratory  12. ECOLOGICAL INFORMATION  Ecological information: No specific studies have been conducted by Henkel on the ecotoxicity or environmental fate of this material; however, commonly available data on the material indicate that uncontrolled releases to soil, groundwater, or surface waters could entail acute and/or chronic ecological effects, depending on the quantity and concentration of such releases. Releases of volatile components to the atmosphere are not believed to entail significant ecological consequences provided such releases are within the exposure levels set forth in this document. Accordingly, all appropriate measures should be taken to avoid uncontrolled releases to the environment, and any spills or other uncontrolled releases which may occur should be contained and cleaned up immediately in accordance with Section 6.  13. DISPOSAL CONSIDERATIONS  Information provided is for unused product only. Recommended method of disposal: Dispose of according to Federal, State and local governmental regulations. Do not puncture or incinerate pressurized cans. D001: Ignitable.  EPA hazardous waste number:  14. TRANSPORT INFORMATION  U.S. Department of Transportation Ground (49 CFR): Proper shipping name: Consumer commodity Hazard class or division: ORM-D Identification number: Not available Packing group: Not available Exceptions: (Up to 1liter when shipped as originally packaged by Henkel only) International Air Transportation (ICAO/IATA): Proper shipping name: Aerosols, flammable NOS Hazard class or division: 2.1 Identification number: UN 1950 Packing group: None WaterTransportation (IMO/IMDG): Proper shipping name: Hazard class or division: Item No. : 83469  Aerosols, flammable 2.1 Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML 4 of 5  Identification number: Packing group:  UN 1950 None  15. REGULATORY INFORMATION  United States Regulatory Information TSCA 8 (b) Inventory Status: TSCA 12 (b) Export Notification: CERCLA/SARA Section 302 EHS: CERCLA/SARA Section 311/312: CERCLA/SARA 313: California Proposition 65: All components are listed or are exempt from listing on the Toxic Substances Control Act Inventory. None. None. Immediate Health Hazard, Fire None. This product contains a chemical known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.  Canada Regulatory Information  CEPA DSL/NDSL Status: WHMIS hazard class:  All components are listed on or are exempt from listing on the Domestic Substances List. A, B.5, D.2.B  16. OTHER INFORMATION  This material safety data sheet contains changes from the previous version in sections: This material safety data sheet contains changes from the previous version in section(s): 2 Prepared by: Dan Shaw, Product Safety and Regulatory Affairs Specialist For Safety and Regulatory Information contact: Product Safety and Regulatory Affairs, Rocky Hill, CT. 860-571-5204  DISCLAIMER: The data contained herein are furnished for information only and are believed to be reliable. However, Henkel Corporation does not assume responsibility for any results obtained by persons over whose methods Henkel Corporation has no control. It is the user \'s responsibility to determine the suitability of Henkel \'s products or any production methods mentioned herein for a particular purpose, and to adopt such precautions as may be advisable for the protection of property and persons against any hazards that may be involved in the handling and use of any of Henkel Corporation \'s products. In light of the foregoing, Henkel Corporation specifically disclaims all warranties, express or implied, including warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose, arising from sale or use of Henkel Corporation \'s products. Henkel Corporation further disclaims any liability for consequential or incidental damages of any kind, including lost profits.  Item No. :  83469 5 of 5  Product name: FREKOTE 770-NC AEROSOL/400ML  ",23);arrFiles[47]=new Array(48,"MSDS/MSDSCarbon.html","20 Jul 2006","Section 1","","","PAS 2-15-06 Material Safety Data Sheet Grafil, Inc. Section 1 Chemical Product and Company Identification Product Name :                                                                         Pyrofil ™ Carbon Fiber Product Codes :                                                                        TR40, MR40, MR50, MR60 MS40, HR40, HS40, SR40, MRX 40 Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Name :                                    Grafil, Inc. Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Address :                                5900 88 th Street Sacramento , CA   95828 Telephone: (916) 386-1733                                                                                                 Facsimile: (916) 383-7668                                                                                     Emergency Telephone Number:                                           (916) 386-1733 [ 9:00 am - 5:00 pm , M - F, PST] Date Prepared :                                                                       August 13, 2002                                                                                                 [ previous version: April 6, 1998 ] Section 2 Composition and Information on Ingredients Ingredient CAS Registry No. Weight % Exposure Limits Carbon fiber 7440-44-0 &#8805; 99% See Note 1 below Polyether resin Trade secret &#8804; 1.2% NE Notes on Composition and Information on Ingredients NE = Not established 1 OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 3 Hazards Identification ***Emergency Overview*** Black continuous carbon fiber. Not expected to present an immediate concern for emergency response personnel. Not expected to present an immediate acute health, reactivity, or flammability hazard. Not expected to present an environmental hazard. Potential Health Effects             Skin : May cause skin irritation. Mechanical irritation may occur from carbon fiber abrading or becoming imbedded in the skin. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon fiber. EyeS : Fragments of this product may cause mechanical eye irritation. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon fiber. Inhalation : Inhalation exposure to respirable fibers of this product is not expected to occur under normal industrial conditions. Under very limited circumstances, however, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation. Ingestion : Not expected to occur during industrial activities since ingestion is not a relevant route of exposure. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : Not regulated as a carcinogen. There are no chronic effects/carcinogenicity data are available on this product. Under very limited circumstances, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation; prolonged exposure may result in more adverse effects. See Section 11 – Toxicological Information for information on subchronic toxicity. NTP: Not listed IARC: Not listed OSHA: Not listed Medical Conditions Aggravated by Exposure : None known. Incompatibility : Not known. Signs and Symptoms of Exposure : May result in slight skin and eye irritation.             Section 4 First Aid Measures First Aid measures Skin : Wash fibers off of skin with water and soap. If fibers are imbedded in the skin, remove with tweezers. Discard clothing that may contain imbedded fibers. Get medical attention if exposure results in adverse effects. Eyes : Immediately flush with a continuous water stream for at least 20 minutes. Washing immediately after exposure is expected to be effective in preventing damage to the eyes. Get medical attention. Inhalation : If there is inhalation exposure to the fibers of this product, remove source of exposure and move victim to fresh air. If not breathing give artificial respiration. If there is breathing difficulty, give oxygen. Get immediate medical attention for any respiratory problems. Ingestion/Swallowed : Not expected to occur since ingestion is not a likely route of exposure for this product. If ingestion does occur, do not induce vomiting. Nothing by mouth if unconscious. Get immediate medical attention. Section 5 Fire Fighting Measures Flash Point :                           Not applicable Explosion/Flammable Limits :         Not applicable Autoignition Temperature :             Not applicable Extinguishing Media : This material is not expected to burn in a fire. If this product is present in a fire, fight fire based on the presence of flammable materials. Special Fire Fighting Procedures : As in any fire, wear a self-contained breathing apparatus pressure demand (MSHA/NIOSH approved or equivalent) and full protective gear. Fight fires from a safe distance or protected areas. Fire hoses with fog nozzles may be used for controlling fires but care must be exercised not to spread flaming. Water may not always be effective for large fires. Unusual Fire and Explosion Hazards : Under high heat (&gt; 750 °C), this product may react with oxygen to give off carbon oxides and other decomposition products. OTHER INFORMATION : This product is not expected to burn. Do not incinerate carbon fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. See Section 13 – Disposal Considerations for additional information. Section 6 Accidental Release Measures Spill/Release and Cleanup Procedures : In case of spill, collect ( e.g. , sweep up, vacuum, etc.) spilled material and either reuse or dispose of properly. Chopped or milled carbon fibers may be slippery if spilled posing an accident risk. Wear personal protective equipment as described in Section 8 during cleanup activities. Section 7 Handling and Storage Precautions to be Taken in Handling and Storage : Store in a cool, dry place. Wash hands with soap and water after handling. Wear appropriate protective clothing as described in Section 8 during handling activities. Section 8 Exposure Controls and Personal Protection Respiratory Protection : Normal use and processing of this product are not expected to generate carbon fiber dust. Respirable fibers of this product under certain very limited circumstances can be generated. In such circumstances, HEPA respiratory protection should be used to prevent exposure Protective Gloves : Latex gloves should be worn when handling this product. Rinse and remove gloves after use, and wash hand thoroughly with soap and water. Gloves should be removed and replaced if there are any signs of degradation or breakthrough. Protective Clothing : Wear protective clothing to minimize the potential for skin contact. An emergency shower should be readily accessible. Discard any clothing that has become contaminated. Eye Protection : Wear safety goggles or glasses when handling or processing this product in any form. Air Monitoring : No information is available. EXPOSURE GUIDELINES : OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 9 Physical and Chemical Properties Appearance :                                 Black continuous fiber Odor :                                             None Specific Gravity :                           1.75 - 1.85 Vapor Pressure :                           None Melting Point :                               Not applicable Solubility in Water :                      Insoluble Section 10 Stability and Reactivity Stability : Stable. Conditions to Avoid : None. Incompatibility/Materials to Avoid : Do not expose to strong oxidizing agents such as fluorine. Carbon fiber can react violently with such compounds. Hazardous Decomposition or Byproducts : Not expected under normal conditions of processing and use. Thermal decomposition of sizing may begin to occur at high temperatures (&gt; 120 °C) resulting in the release of small amounts of nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, organic compounds, and other potentially hazardous substances. Hazardous Polymerization : Will not occur. Section 11 Toxicological Information Acute Toxicological Data : There are no acute toxicological data available on this product. The oral, dermal, and inhalation acute toxicity are expected to be very low. EYE IRRITATION data : No data are available. Skin Irritation data : No data are available. Skin Sensitization data : No data are available. Subchronic toxicity : Two subchronic inhalation tests in rats exposed to carbon fibers have been conducted. In one test, rats were exposed to fibers for 16 weeks. Pulmonary function tests performed on the test animals before necropsy did not show any significant or consistent changes. The only pulmonary finding related to exposure was the occurrence of phagocytosis by alveolar macrophages. No inflammation or fibrosis was observed. In the second study, rats were also exposed to carbon fibers for 16 weeks. Based on clinical signs, no effects due to exposure were observed. Histopathological evaluation revealed non-fibrous particles in the pulmonary lymphoid clearance system and in alveolar macrophages. There were no signs of fibrosis. Reproductive Toxicity : No data are available. Teratogenicity (birth defects) : No data are available. Mutagenicity : Several in vitro mutagenicity tests have been performed on carbon fibers. Carbon fibers have been found to be negative in the gene mutation assay in bacteria (Ames test), did not cause sister chromatid exchanges in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and did not cause unscheduled DNA synthesis in rat liver cells or forward mutations in studies with CHO cells. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : No data are available. Section 12 Ecological Information EcoTOXICOlogical DATA : No data are available. Environmental Fate Data : No data are available. Physical/Chemical Properties : No data are available. Section 13 Disposal Considerations RCRA Classification : If discarded in its manufactured form, this product is not expected to be a characteristic or specifically listed hazardous waste under RCRA. However, it is the responsibility of the user to determine at the time of disposal whether a material containing the product or derived from the product should be classified as a hazardous waste. Special Instructions : Do not incinerate carbon fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. Any disposal practices must be in compliance with federal, state, and local requirements. Section 14 Transport Information U.S./International Shipping Information under DOT/ IMO /IATA Regulations : This product is not regulated as dangerous or hazardous goods under DOT, IMO , ICAO, IATA, or UN shipping regulations. Section 15 Regulatory Information Regulatory Status : This product, as well as its impurities, may trigger specific reporting, recordkeeping, and testing requirements under TSCA, EPCRA/SARA III, RCRA, CERCLA, CAA , SDWA, and CWA. California Proposition 65 : This product contains no chemicals known to the state of California to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity. Other state chemical lists : This product contains no chemicals known to be present on any state chemical lists. EPCRA/SARA Title III Section 313 : This compound contains no toxic chemicals at or above the de-minimus threshold subject to the reporting requirements of Section 313 of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and 40 CFR 372.  Section 16 Other Information Disclaimer : This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is believed to be accurate to the best knowledge of Grafil, Inc. The information presented in this MSDS is related only to the specific material designated herein. Grafil, Inc. assumes no legal responsibility for the use or reliance upon these data. The user should review any recommendation in the specific context of the intended use to determine whether appropriate. ",54);arrFiles[48]=new Array(49,"MSDS/CarbonSLEMSDS.htm","31 Aug 2009","Certificate of Compliance","","","Material Safety Data Sheet Soller Composites, LLC Section 1 Chemical Product and Company Identification Product Name : Carbon Fiber, Basalt  &amp;/or Fiberglass Sleeving Product Codes : Carbon Fiber, Basalt, Carbon/Fiberglass, Carbon/aramid (Kevlar) &amp; Fiberglass Sleeving Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Name : Soller Composites, LLC Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Address : Soller Composites, LLC 20 Canal St. Franklin, NH 03235 603 998 1947 815 642 9593 Emergency Telephone Number: 603 998 1947 [9:00 am - 9:00 pm, M - F, EST] Date Prepared : 4, 2007 Section 2 Composition and Information on Ingredients Ingredient CAS Registry No. Weight % Exposure Limits Carbon, carbon/aramid &amp;/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber 7440-44-0 &#8805; 99% See Note 1 below Respirable fibrous carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt dust not assigned not known* not known* Notes on Composition and Information on Ingredients *AMOUNT WILL BE DEPENDENT UPON METHOD OF HANDLING NE = Not established 1 OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon &amp; Fiberglass and/or Basalt fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 3 Hazards Identification ***Emergency Overview*** Black continuous carbon, carbon/aramid fiber and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber. Not expected to present an immediate concern for emergency response personnel. Not expected to present an immediate acute health, reactivity, or flammability hazard. Not expected to present an environmental hazard. Potential Health Effects Skin : May cause skin irritation. Mechanical irritation may occur from carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber abrading or becoming imbedded in the skin. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber. EyeS : Fragments of this product may cause mechanical eye irritation. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber. Inhalation : Inhalation exposure to respirable fibers of this product is not expected to occur under normal industrial conditions. Under very limited circumstances, however, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation. Ingestion : Not expected to occur during industrial activities since ingestion is not a relevant route of exposure. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : Not regulated as a carcinogen. There are no chronic effects/carcinogenicity data are available on this product. Under very limited circumstances, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation; prolonged exposure may result in more adverse effects. See Section 11 – Toxicological Information for information on subchronic toxicity. NTP: Not listed IARC: Not listed OSHA: Not listed Medical Conditions Aggravated by Exposure : None known. Incompatibility : Not known. Signs and Symptoms of Exposure : May result in slight skin and eye irritation. Section 4 First Aid Measures First Aid measures Skin : Wash fibers off of skin with water and soap. If fibers are imbedded in the skin, remove with tweezers. Discard clothing that may contain imbedded fibers. Get medical attention if exposure results in adverse effects. Eyes : Immediately flush with a continuous water stream for at least 20 minutes. Washing immediately after exposure is expected to be effective in preventing damage to the eyes. Get medical attention. Inhalation : If there is inhalation exposure to the fibers of this product, remove source of exposure and move victim to fresh air. If not breathing give artificial respiration. If there is breathing difficulty, give oxygen. Get immediate medical attention for any respiratory problems. Ingestion/Swallowed : Not expected to occur since ingestion is not a likely route of exposure for this product. If ingestion does occur, do not induce vomiting. Nothing by mouth if unconscious. Get immediate medical attention. Section 5 Fire Fighting Measures Flash Point : Not applicable Explosion/Flammable Limits : Not applicable Autoignition Temperature : Not applicable Extinguishing Media : This material is not expected to burn in a fire. If this product is present in a fire, fight fire based on the presence of flammable materials. Special Fire Fighting Procedures : As in any fire, wear a self-contained breathing apparatus pressure demand (MSHA/NIOSH approved or equivalent) and full protective gear. Fight fires from a safe distance or protected areas. Fire hoses with fog nozzles may be used for controlling fires but care must be exercised not to spread flaming. Water may not always be effective for large fires. Unusual Fire and Explosion Hazards : Under high heat (&gt; 750 °C), this product may react with oxygen to give off carbon oxides and other decomposition products. OTHER INFORMATION : This product is not expected to burn. Do not incinerate and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. See Section 13 – Disposal Considerations for additional information. Section 6 Accidental Release Measures Spill/Release and Cleanup Procedures : In case of spill, collect ( e.g. , sweep up, vacuum, etc.) spilled material and either reuse or dispose of properly. Chopped or milled fibers may be slippery if spilled posing an accident risk. Wear personal protective equipment as described in Section 8 during cleanup activities. Section 7 Handling and Storage Precautions to be Taken in Handling and Storage : Store in a cool, dry place. Wash hands with soap and water after handling. Wear appropriate protective clothing as described in Section 8 during handling activities. Section 8 Exposure Controls and Personal Protection Respiratory Protection : Normal use and processing of this product  may generate carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber dust. Respirable fibers of this product under certain very limited circumstances can be generated. In such circumstances, HEPA respiratory protection should be used to prevent exposure Protective Gloves : Latex gloves should be worn when handling this product. Rinse and remove gloves after use, and wash hand thoroughly with soap and water. Gloves should be removed and replaced if there are any signs of degradation or breakthrough. Protective Clothing : Wear protective clothing to minimize the potential for skin contact. An emergency shower should be readily accessible. Discard any clothing that has become contaminated. Eye Protection : Wear safety goggles or glasses when handling or processing this product in any form. Air Monitoring : No information is available. EXPOSURE GUIDELINES : OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 9 Physical and Chemical Properties Appearance : Black continuous fiber (carbon fiber), Silverish-White continuous fiber (fiberglass),                                                               Dark Greenish Brown (Basalt), Yellow or off-white (aramid) Odor : None Vapor Pressure : None Melting Point : Not applicable Solubility in Water : Insoluble Section 10 Stability and Reactivity Stability : Stable. Conditions to Avoid : None. Incompatibility/Materials to Avoid : Do not expose to strong oxidizing agents such as fluorine. Carbon and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fiber may react violently with such compounds. Hazardous Decomposition or Byproducts : Not expected under normal conditions of processing and use. Thermal decomposition of sizing may begin to occur at high temperatures (&gt; 120 °C) resulting in the release of small amounts of nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, organic compounds, and other potentially hazardous substances. Hazardous Polymerization : Will not occur. Section 11 Toxicological Information Acute Toxicological Data : There are no acute toxicological data available on this product. The oral, dermal, and inhalation acute toxicity are expected to be very low. EYE IRRITATION data : No data are available. Skin Irritation data : No data are available. Skin Sensitization data : No data are available. Subchronic toxicity : Two subchronic inhalation tests in rats exposed to carbon and/or fiberglass fibers have been conducted. In one test, rats were exposed to fibers for 16 weeks. Pulmonary function tests performed on the test animals before necropsy did not show any significant or consistent changes. The only pulmonary finding related to exposure was the occurrence of phagocytosis by alveolar macrophages. No inflammation or fibrosis was observed. In the second study, rats were also exposed to carbon fibers for 16 weeks. Based on clinical signs, no effects due to exposure were observed. Histopathological evaluation revealed non-fibrous particles in the pulmonary lymphoid clearance system and in alveolar macrophages. There were no signs of fibrosis. Reproductive Toxicity : No data are available. Teratogenicity (birth defects) : No data are available. Mutagenicity : Several in vitro mutagenicity tests have been performed on carbon fibers. Carbon fibers have been found to be negative in the gene mutation assay in bacteria (Ames test), did not cause sister chromatid exchanges in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and did not cause unscheduled DNA synthesis in rat liver cells or forward mutations in studies with CHO cells. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : No data are available. Section 12 Ecological Information EcoTOXICOlogical DATA : No data are available. Environmental Fate Data : No data are available. Physical/Chemical Properties : No data are available. Section 13 Disposal Considerations RCRA Classification : If discarded in its manufactured form, this product is not expected to be a characteristic or specifically listed hazardous waste under RCRA. However, it is the responsibility of the user to determine at the time of disposal whether a material containing the product or derived from the product should be classified as a hazardous waste. Special Instructions : Do not incinerate carbon, carbon/aramid and/or Fiberglass and/or Basalt fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. Any disposal practices must be in compliance with federal, state, and local requirements. Section 14 Transport Information U.S./International Shipping Information under DOT/IMO/IATA Regulations : This product is not regulated as dangerous or hazardous goods under DOT, IMO, ICAO, IATA, or UN shipping regulations. Section 15 Regulatory Information Regulatory Status : This product, as well as its impurities, may trigger specific reporting, recordkeeping, and testing requirements under TSCA, EPCRA/SARA III, RCRA, CERCLA, CAA, SDWA, and CWA. California Proposition 65 : This product contains no chemicals known to the state of California to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity. Other state chemical lists : This product contains no chemicals known to be present on any state chemical lists. EPCRA/SARA Title III Section 313 : This compound contains no toxic chemicals at or above the de-minimus threshold subject to the reporting requirements of Section 313 of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and 40 CFR 372. Section 16 Other Information Disclaimer : This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is believed to be accurate to the best knowledge of Soller Composites, LLC. The information presented in this MSDS is related only to the specific material designated herein. Soller Composites, LLC. assumes no legal responsibility for the use or reliance upon these data. The user should review any recommendation in the specific context of the intended use to determine whether appropriate. Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. ",48);arrFiles[49]=new Array(50,"MSDS/Fiberex%20-%20Fiberglass%20PFW%20408,%20409,%20526,%20503%20(Dated%2001-2004).JPG","1 Nov 2007","Fiberex%20-%20Fiberglass%20PFW%20408,%20409,%20526,%20503%20(Dated%2001-2004).JPG","","","",854);arrFiles[50]=new Array(51,"MSDS/CarbonMSDS.htm","27 Jan 2009","Certificate of Compliance","","","Material Safety Data Sheet Soller Composites, LLC Section 1 Chemical Product and Company Identification Product Name : Carbon Fiber Product Codes : Carbon Fiber Fabric, 1K, 3K, 6K, 12K Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Name : Soller Composites, LLC Manufacturer \'s/Distributor’s Address : Soller Composites, LLC 20 Canal St. Franklin, NH 03235 603 934 1029 815 642 9593 Emergency Telephone Number: 603 934 1029 [9:00 am - 9:00 pm, M - F, EST] Date Prepared : 10, 2007 Section 2 Composition and Information on Ingredients Ingredient CAS Registry No. Weight % Exposure Limits Carbon fiber 7440-44-0 &#8805; 99% See Note 1 below Respirable fibrous carbon dust not assigned not known* not known* Notes on Composition and Information on Ingredients *AMOUNT WILL BE DEPENDENT UPON METHOD OF HANDLING NE = Not established 1 OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 3 Hazards Identification ***Emergency Overview*** Black continuous carbon fiber. Not expected to present an immediate concern for emergency response personnel. Not expected to present an immediate acute health, reactivity, or flammability hazard. Not expected to present an environmental hazard. Potential Health Effects Skin : May cause skin irritation. Mechanical irritation may occur from carbon fiber abrading or becoming imbedded in the skin. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon fiber. EyeS : Fragments of this product may cause mechanical eye irritation. Chemical irritation may occur from exposure to sizing present on the carbon fiber. Inhalation : Inhalation exposure to respirable fibers of this product is not expected to occur under normal industrial conditions. Under very limited circumstances, however, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation. Ingestion : Not expected to occur during industrial activities since ingestion is not a relevant route of exposure. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : Not regulated as a carcinogen. There are no chronic effects/carcinogenicity data are available on this product. Under very limited circumstances, exposure to respirable fibers of this product can occur and may result in respiratory tract irritation; prolonged exposure may result in more adverse effects. See Section 11 – Toxicological Information for information on subchronic toxicity. NTP: Not listed IARC: Not listed OSHA: Not listed Medical Conditions Aggravated by Exposure : None known. Incompatibility : Not known. Signs and Symptoms of Exposure : May result in slight skin and eye irritation. Section 4 First Aid Measures First Aid measures Skin : Wash fibers off of skin with water and soap. If fibers are imbedded in the skin, remove with tweezers. Discard clothing that may contain imbedded fibers. Get medical attention if exposure results in adverse effects. Eyes : Immediately flush with a continuous water stream for at least 20 minutes. Washing immediately after exposure is expected to be effective in preventing damage to the eyes. Get medical attention. Inhalation : If there is inhalation exposure to the fibers of this product, remove source of exposure and move victim to fresh air. If not breathing give artificial respiration. If there is breathing difficulty, give oxygen. Get immediate medical attention for any respiratory problems. Ingestion/Swallowed : Not expected to occur since ingestion is not a likely route of exposure for this product. If ingestion does occur, do not induce vomiting. Nothing by mouth if unconscious. Get immediate medical attention. Section 5 Fire Fighting Measures Flash Point : Not applicable Explosion/Flammable Limits : Not applicable Autoignition Temperature : Not applicable Extinguishing Media : This material is not expected to burn in a fire. If this product is present in a fire, fight fire based on the presence of flammable materials. Special Fire Fighting Procedures : As in any fire, wear a self-contained breathing apparatus pressure demand (MSHA/NIOSH approved or equivalent) and full protective gear. Fight fires from a safe distance or protected areas. Fire hoses with fog nozzles may be used for controlling fires but care must be exercised not to spread flaming. Water may not always be effective for large fires. Unusual Fire and Explosion Hazards : Under high heat (&gt; 750 °C), this product may react with oxygen to give off carbon oxides and other decomposition products. OTHER INFORMATION : This product is not expected to burn. Do not incinerate carbon fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. See Section 13 – Disposal Considerations for additional information. Section 6 Accidental Release Measures Spill/Release and Cleanup Procedures : In case of spill, collect ( e.g. , sweep up, vacuum, etc.) spilled material and either reuse or dispose of properly. Chopped or milled carbon fibers may be slippery if spilled posing an accident risk. Wear personal protective equipment as described in Section 8 during cleanup activities. Section 7 Handling and Storage Precautions to be Taken in Handling and Storage : Store in a cool, dry place. Wash hands with soap and water after handling. Wear appropriate protective clothing as described in Section 8 during handling activities. Section 8 Exposure Controls and Personal Protection Respiratory Protection : Normal use and processing of this product are not expected to generate carbon fiber dust. Respirable fibers of this product under certain very limited circumstances can be generated. In such circumstances, HEPA respiratory protection should be used to prevent exposure Protective Gloves : Latex gloves should be worn when handling this product. Rinse and remove gloves after use, and wash hand thoroughly with soap and water. Gloves should be removed and replaced if there are any signs of degradation or breakthrough. Protective Clothing : Wear protective clothing to minimize the potential for skin contact. An emergency shower should be readily accessible. Discard any clothing that has become contaminated. Eye Protection : Wear safety goggles or glasses when handling or processing this product in any form. Air Monitoring : No information is available. EXPOSURE GUIDELINES : OSHA and ACGIH have not established air contaminant limits for carbon fibers. Under certain conditions, this substance may be a nuisance dust. OSHA has an established standard for particulates not otherwise regulated (nuisance dust) set at 5 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 15 mg/m 3 (total dust). ACGIH has established an exposure value of 3 mg/m 3 (respirable fraction) and 10 mg/m 3 (inhalable fraction) for particulates not otherwise classified. Section 9 Physical and Chemical Properties Appearance : Black continuous fiber Odor : None Specific Gravity : 1.75 - 1.85 Vapor Pressure : None Melting Point : Not applicable Solubility in Water : Insoluble Section 10 Stability and Reactivity Stability : Stable. Conditions to Avoid : None. Incompatibility/Materials to Avoid : Do not expose to strong oxidizing agents such as fluorine. Carbon fiber can react violently with such compounds. Hazardous Decomposition or Byproducts : Not expected under normal conditions of processing and use. Thermal decomposition of sizing may begin to occur at high temperatures (&gt; 120 °C) resulting in the release of small amounts of nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, organic compounds, and other potentially hazardous substances. Hazardous Polymerization : Will not occur. Section 11 Toxicological Information Acute Toxicological Data : There are no acute toxicological data available on this product. The oral, dermal, and inhalation acute toxicity are expected to be very low. EYE IRRITATION data : No data are available. Skin Irritation data : No data are available. Skin Sensitization data : No data are available. Subchronic toxicity : Two subchronic inhalation tests in rats exposed to carbon fibers have been conducted. In one test, rats were exposed to fibers for 16 weeks. Pulmonary function tests performed on the test animals before necropsy did not show any significant or consistent changes. The only pulmonary finding related to exposure was the occurrence of phagocytosis by alveolar macrophages. No inflammation or fibrosis was observed. In the second study, rats were also exposed to carbon fibers for 16 weeks. Based on clinical signs, no effects due to exposure were observed. Histopathological evaluation revealed non-fibrous particles in the pulmonary lymphoid clearance system and in alveolar macrophages. There were no signs of fibrosis. Reproductive Toxicity : No data are available. Teratogenicity (birth defects) : No data are available. Mutagenicity : Several in vitro mutagenicity tests have been performed on carbon fibers. Carbon fibers have been found to be negative in the gene mutation assay in bacteria (Ames test), did not cause sister chromatid exchanges in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, and did not cause unscheduled DNA synthesis in rat liver cells or forward mutations in studies with CHO cells. Chronic Effects/Carcinogenicity : No data are available. Section 12 Ecological Information EcoTOXICOlogical DATA : No data are available. Environmental Fate Data : No data are available. Physical/Chemical Properties : No data are available. Section 13 Disposal Considerations RCRA Classification : If discarded in its manufactured form, this product is not expected to be a characteristic or specifically listed hazardous waste under RCRA. However, it is the responsibility of the user to determine at the time of disposal whether a material containing the product or derived from the product should be classified as a hazardous waste. Special Instructions : Do not incinerate carbon fibers since airborne fibers may cause electrical malfunctions. Any disposal practices must be in compliance with federal, state, and local requirements. Section 14 Transport Information U.S./International Shipping Information under DOT/IMO/IATA Regulations : This product is not regulated as dangerous or hazardous goods under DOT, IMO, ICAO, IATA, or UN shipping regulations. Section 15 Regulatory Information Regulatory Status : This product, as well as its impurities, may trigger specific reporting, recordkeeping, and testing requirements under TSCA, EPCRA/SARA III, RCRA, CERCLA, CAA, SDWA, and CWA. California Proposition 65 : This product contains no chemicals known to the state of California to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity. Other state chemical lists : This product contains no chemicals known to be present on any state chemical lists. EPCRA/SARA Title III Section 313 : This compound contains no toxic chemicals at or above the de-minimus threshold subject to the reporting requirements of Section 313 of Title III of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 and 40 CFR 372. Section 16 Other Information Disclaimer : This information is furnished without warranty, expressed or implied, except that it is believed to be accurate to the best knowledge of Soller Composites, LLC. The information presented in this MSDS is related only to the specific material designated herein. Soller Composites, LLC. assumes no legal responsibility for the use or reliance upon these data. The user should review any recommendation in the specific context of the intended use to determine whether appropriate. Soller Composites, LLC assumes no responsibility for the use, misuse, and/or results of either, as related to any materials, product(s), information, and/or suggestions. Customers are strongly encouraged to, and should/must, research the proper safe use of such products and determine the suitability of each product for his or her individual application(s). Purchase of products from Soller Composites, LLC constitutes acceptance of these terms and any and all liability. Soller Composite, LLCs sole responsibility and/or liability are limited to the replacement of product or refund of purchase price. ",48);arrFiles[51]=new Array(52,"MSDS/ShrinkMSDS.html","24 Jul 2008","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET","","","MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET Product: Heat Shrink Tubing 1. PRODUCT AND COMPANY IDENTIFICATION PRODUCT NAME: (Composite) Heat Shrinkable Tubing PRODUCT DESCRIPTION: Flame Retarded Heat Shrinkable Tubing PRODUCT CODE: Comp-Shrink EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS Soller Composites, LLC 87 Hill Rd Franklin , NH 03235 www.sollercomposites.com 603 998 1947 Emergency Phone: 603 998 1947 9:00 am – 9:00 pm EST 2. HAZARDS IDENTIFICATION The flame-retarded chemicals inside the tubing do not contain toxic elements (i.e. Cadmium and Lead). However, if the tubing is overheated or burned, harmful vapors may be released. Under normal conditions of processing and handling, the product is stable and no likelihood of exposure exists. 3. PHYSICAL AND CHEMCIAL DATA NORMAL CONDITION – Solid State BOILING POINT – Not applicable MELTING POINT – Base polymer 90°C, Tubing will not melt at 90°C. SPECIFIC GRAVITY – 1.35-1.40 VAPOR DENSITY (AIR = 1) – Not applicable EVAPORATION RATE ( BUTYL ACETATE = 1) – Not applicable SOLUBILITY IN WATER – Negligible APPEARANCE &amp; ODOR – All in tubing form. Odorless 4. FIRE FIGHTING MEASURES FLASH POINT: &gt;200°C FLAMMABLE LIMITS IN AIR: Not applicable FLAMMABILITY: The outer jacket is self-extinguishing. 5. REACTIVITY DATA STABILITY: Stable CONDITIONS TO AVOID: Avoid overheating and burning INCOMPATIBILTY : Organic solvents HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSTION PRODUCTS: None in normal operation HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION: Will not occur 6. HEALTH HAZARD INFORMATION INHALATION: No hazard under normal operating condition INGESTION: Non digestible SKIN: May cause thermal burns when heated. In rare cases, may cause skin irritation. EYES: Not applicable UNUSUAL CHRONIC TOXICITY: No known associated with the industrial use of this product SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF EXPOSURE: Not applicable 7. FIRST AID MEASURES THERMAL BURNS: Cool rapidly with fresh water. Consult a physician 8. PRECAUTIONS AND SAFE HANDLING PROCEDURES SPILL OR LEAK: Collect in container STORAGE : Store in dry place, avoid excessive heat WASTE DISPOSAL: Local disposal regulation (Not recyclable) OTHER PRECAUTIONS: None 9. CONTROL MEASURES VENTILATION: General ventilation is adequate under normal manufacturing environment PROTECTIVE GLOVES: Necessary when handling the heated tubing PROTECTIVE CLOTHING: Not necessary under operating condition. Wash hands after working  with tubing. MANUFACTURER DISCLAIMER To the best of our knowledge, the information contained herein is accurate. However, neither Soller Composites, LLC, it suppliers, partners, or employees assumes any liability whatsoever for the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein. Final determination of suitability of any material is the sole responsibility of the user. All materials may present unknown hazards and should be used with caution. Although certain hazards are described herein, we cannot guarantee that these are the only hazards, which exist. ",15);arrFiles[52]=new Array(53,"MSDS/Basalt-MSDS.pdf","17 Aug 2006","Basalt-MSDS","","","Material safety data sheet.  Section1. Company and Material identification. Company KAMENNY VEK Dubna, 141980, Moscow Region, RUSSIA, P.O.Box 180 Tel.: +7 095 196 8852 Tel./fax: +7 095 196 3914 Products Products based on basalt continuous filament from Kamenny Vek including: basalt roving, basalt chopped strand, basalt fabric, basalt mesh, basalt mats and felts. Ingredients Basalt continuous filament >99 % Wt. (typical) Surface Binder/Sizing <0.6 % Wt. (typical) Chemical composition of basalt continuous filament. SiO2  50% Wt., CaO, Na2O, FeO, l2O3. Chemical composition of surface binder/sizing. All used surface binder/sizing are not hazardous and based on silane.  Section 2. Physical data. Material (at normal condition) Solid Section 3. Fire and explosive. Special fire fighting procedures Non flammable Section 4. Reactivity data. Stability Stable Hazardous decomposition products None  1  Material safety data sheet.  Section 5. Toxicological information. Effect of overexposure Acute - Basalt continuous filaments may cause mechanical irritation to the skin, eye and upper respiratory tract. Chronic- there is no known health effects connected with long term use or contact with this product. Precautions: Avoid contact with eyes. Avoid contact with skin. Avoid breathing dust. Do not swallow. Do not eat, drink or smoke in work area. Wash thoroughly after handling . Section 6. Emergency and first aid procedures Inhalation. Move person to fresh air. Seek medical attention if irritation persists. Eye contact. Flush eyes with running water for at least 15 minutes. Seek medical attention if irritation persists. Skin contact. Wash with mild soap and running water. Use a washcloth to help remove fibers. To avoid more irritation, do not rub or scratch effected area. Seek medical attention if irritation persists. Ingestion. Ingestion of this material is unlikely. If it does occur, watch the person for several days to make sure that intestinal blockage does not occur. Section 7. Personal protection. Respiratory protection. If use or application of this product generates dust, use a filter respirator. Eye and face protection. Standard safety glasses with side shields. Protective gloves. Use gloves to protect against physical irritation or injury if required by handling conditions. Section 8. Ecological information Basalt fiber is generally considered to be an inert solid waste. No special precautions are needed in case of release or spill. Section 9. Carcinogenicity status These products are not listed as a carcinogens or suspected carcinogens by NTP, IARC or OSHA.  2  ",84);