

Bondo Fiberglass Cloth, 20128, 8 Sq Ft
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SpeedCultureStudios
> 3 dayIve used this product a number of times over the years and always have great results. The resin mixture is most important in my opinion and patience, but this cloth definitely helps. It lays nicely and takes resin well.
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Edward Harvey
Greater than one weekI used this to cover holes in the rear fender of my vehicle caused by rust. I cut out the rust and then recovered it with this fiberglass cloth. Then I also used it to repair my front bumper. It becomes stronger than the rest of the bumper. This is a genie cloth. Used with resin it is magic. Easy to cut, easy to use and the results are very effective.
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LR
> 3 dayWeave was much too large - frayed completely before I could even apply it - worthless for what I needed it for. Perhaps I misread it (size of weave), but as quickly as it frayed I cannot imagine what you would use it for.
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michael McAuley
> 3 dayThis is just a basic fiberglass mat you would expect, but it is a bit stiff and hard to use on contours in projects.
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Dr. Sylvan Swaniawski
> 3 dayGood price.
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Beauty
08-06-2025This wasnt what i thought it was. I thought it would be tape as in sticky backed. It is not. I gave it five stars because this was my mistake.
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Corey
> 3 dayAfter dabbling in fabricating one-off items with fiberglass for the past few years, I picked up a package of this cloth from a local retailer. When I got it home, I was severely disappointed in it. Why? 1) Price. Most suppliers charge by the lineal yard, and on a 50 roll (Typical size, though 38 and 60 are also fairly common), a single lineal yard is 12.5 sq ft, and runs about $4.00 for the same style of mat. So youre paying about four times as much per square foot for this inferior cloth. However, that brings me to my second point -- 2) Weight/Thickness. Its incredibly thin. This must be something like 2oz or 3oz cloth, because its as thin as bible paper, and takes a ton of layers to get anything rigid enough not to flex at the slightest touch. Most suppliers dont carry anything smaller than 4oz, and most fabricators dont use anything less than 8oz fabrics. If youre just patching something small and dont mind having to layer this up multiple times, then it should be fine. If youre trying to actually build something from scratch, get something heavier that wont buckle under its own weight.
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Monstuer M. Herring
> 3 dayBondo is a trademark name and they put out a good product Ive been using there products for years, Ive got the product in a very fast time and Ive been putting it to good us. It works a fast patch on fiberglass from cars to motorcycle and fiberglass back packs.
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Jerry S
10-06-2025Works great.
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Barry S.
> 3 dayeasy to work with absorbs the E765 great