Cutting a bevel in GRP

I bought a small angle grinder,
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one that could be held and used in one hand, for such a job. I considered trying to make some sort of conical backing pad but in the end just used the ordinary flexible backing pads and a coarse sanding disc ( the grinding disc was far too aggressive) and did the "repair" from the outside anyway, although I started with a layer of biaxial glass cloth on the inside laid up against peel ply supported by a flexible pad taped to the outside

That's exactly what i used for the tapers, although i did put a small taper on the inside as my hole was two inch dia'. Rather than peel ply i cut a piece out of a 4 pint milk "bottle" and stuck it to the hull with tank tape.
 
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I'be been thinking of buying one of those. Which make did you buy?

I bought a cheapo Silverline PowerFile about £28 delivered. I used it for days on end fitting a bow thruster and apart from the belt slipping off a few times when I abused it it performed well without any problems. and it felt a lot safer than an angle grinder as the belt speed is quite modest and it seems difficult to imagine haviing an accident with one. Wish I had one years ago.
 
I bought a cheapo Silverline PowerFile about £28 delivered. I used it for days on end fitting a bow thruster and apart from the belt slipping off a few times when I abused it it performed well without any problems. and it felt a lot safer than an angle grinder as the belt speed is quite modest and it seems difficult to imagine haviing an accident with one. Wish I had one years ago.
Thanks :encouragement:
 
The local GRP expert, who's always worth watching (for I have learnt many things from watching how he does his job) used an angle grinder, with what looked like a sanding disc. This made short work of it - a sander would probably be a bit slow for it. He's done a fine job repairing a friends encapsulated lead keel after they've hit a submerged piece of Ireland. The bevel area is indeed enourmous compared to the size of the hole, and loads of glass and resin went into it.
 
The local GRP expert, who's always worth watching (for I have learnt many things from watching how he does his job) used an angle grinder, with what looked like a sanding disc. This made short work of it - a sander would probably be a bit slow for it. He's done a fine job repairing a friends encapsulated lead keel after they've hit a submerged piece of Ireland. The bevel area is indeed enourmous compared to the size of the hole, and loads of glass and resin went into it.

Repairing grounding damage is a different game to filling a neatly bored hole.
Impact damage will have stressed the grp over a wide area. Often with hidden cracks and broken fibres well beyond the visible damage.
So it's normal practice to remove a lot of material.
 

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