RLLigman said:Eric, a couple of years ago I considered contacting the owner and to ask what he would want for the company, with the intent of rectifying the bill issue and attempting to resurrect this line of decoys...never followed through on it though.
Bill Burruss said:Toledo heads on my scoters held up well. Shame they went out of business. That would be a great product to resurect.
RLLigman said:Eric, the two options to fix this issue are stupid simple:
Make the head pours with 16lb density foam.
Add more urethane resin to the head's exterior skin pour to fill the bill cavity back to the eye sockets, actually quite easy, as is tinting the resin to brown, black, gray or whatever, other than white...
Huntindave McCann said:I have no clue what was used. This a commercial decoy made by Lou Tish. I'll use epoxy for the repair.
RLLigman said:Can e. Allen decoy heads be poured with a solid bill?
Eric Patterson said:RLLigman said:Eric, the two options to fix this issue are stupid simple:
Make the head pours with 16lb density foam.
Add more urethane resin to the head's exterior skin pour to fill the bill cavity back to the eye sockets, actually quite easy, as is tinting the resin to brown, black, gray or whatever, other than white...
Maybe Lou will see this thread and explain his head foam choice or constraints.
Jay K said:Frank,
Appreciate the input. So you just carefully give it a couple squirts around the seams or cracks, let dry, then file down?
Was wondering if there were any tips. I recently used it to seal some holes in siding of my house where the electrician removed some wires. It worked but boy was it messy.