Superglue
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Superglue
I've used superglue to assemble some of my models but I've found out that it seems to not hold for a long time. What I mean is that I've assembled a model and then months later, it comes apart.
What do you all think?
What do you all think?
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- Joseph C. Brown
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- Lt. Z0mBe
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Urban legend told among us modelers.PACinT wrote:CA was designed to glue flesh and skin, good pull but no shear strength.
Hence not feasable for attaching heavy parts.
It was originally designed for making acrylic-like optics on anti-aircraft guns as well as manned machine guns on aircraft (like those on bombers). That was in the 1930's and into the early war years. But the results were disappointing. The gubmint experimented with a different formulation of cyanoacrylate (ester versus gamma or somesuch I think) during the Vietnam war for field medics but the results were, again, deemed disappointing for whatever reason.
I use CA all the time for stuff, but it is a delicate art to be sure. For regular bonding, I use the regular old Loctite "normal" viscosity in the clogproof triangularish bottle you get at Wal-Mart. I place a drop on a palette and apply it from their with a scribing punch or straight pin. You can even get it to feather along an edge by grabbing a drop on the clean, tapered tip and walking the pin/punch along the seam you're trying to glue - the seam will pull the glue down into and along it when this is done, allowing for minimal cleanup later. The dried glue I just "flick" off the scribe or pin with the back of a blade, the edge of tweezers, or the side of a chisel.
For a lot of gap-filling, I use the same Gorilla rubber-impregnated CA that Robb speaks of. He and others turned me on to these types of CA. I started out with the expensive Japanese stuff but found the Gorilla to work just as well or better.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
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Try the old Wal-Mart Loctite in the clear, conical bottle with black ribbed cap. They last for years, even with daily use and the exposure of constantly having the cap removed.Saturn wrote:I've all but abandoned CA altogether because of its abbreviated shelf life. Lost count of how many hardened CA bottles I threw out.
Still have a few cans of CA accelerator. I don't think that stuff ever goes bad.
Kenny
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Re: Superglue
I hope that this is the correct place to post this reply
While working on my 1/1000 scale USS Enterprise - I was wiring the Nacelles and used Super Glue for the wires through the Nacelle Pylons. It did not turn out very well. I had to strip the wires out and sand our the Super Glue, then I needed to retrench the Pylons so that the wires for the Nacelles were able to run down to the Lower Hull
This was a leaning experience and found that using Testors Glue worked very well, it took a little more time than Super Glue but the time it took was less time than have to rework everything when the Super Glue was used.
While working on my 1/1000 scale USS Enterprise - I was wiring the Nacelles and used Super Glue for the wires through the Nacelle Pylons. It did not turn out very well. I had to strip the wires out and sand our the Super Glue, then I needed to retrench the Pylons so that the wires for the Nacelles were able to run down to the Lower Hull
This was a leaning experience and found that using Testors Glue worked very well, it took a little more time than Super Glue but the time it took was less time than have to rework everything when the Super Glue was used.
Re: Superglue
If I have difficult parts to glue together that will only come meet with me holding them tightly, then I will use a small amount of superglue to hold the parts together tightly until I can glue the whole piece. Other than that the only thing I use superglue for is to fill seams and such.
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"Basically what I do everyday."
I AM Spartacus!
I'm Batman.
Don't believe everything you see on the Internet!- Abraham Lincoln
Oh my God!! It's full of plastic peanuts!
Today is a good day to model!
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Re: Superglue
with the use of this product. Hypothetically if you were to use a SA product, which in time becomes brittle and becomes unstable; if you use this product to hold a model part in place, then follow it up with other longer lasting adhesive Testors, Tamiya or other product, would there be any benefit to using a SA product in this application?
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Re: Superglue
I don't really understand what you're asking. I would say, however that you're kind of conflating two issues - brittleness and stability. CA gets harder over time which means it's more brittle but not necessarily more unstable. For example, iron is harder and more brittle than aluminum. However there are times when you absolutely want iron beams and rails instead of aluminum. On the gripping claw, there are other times when the aluminum is more desirable.modelbldr_207582 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 01, 2017 2:58 pm with the use of this product. Hypothetically if you were to use a SA product, which in time becomes brittle and becomes unstable; if you use this product to hold a model part in place, then follow it up with other longer lasting adhesive Testors, Tamiya or other product, would there be any benefit to using a SA product in this application?
As the CA gets harder, it becomes more susceptible to sheering but less susceptible to tensile forces. Most CAs will actually get harder after 24 hours than the styrene they're stuck to, making sanding and feathering them into plastic a chore. Rubber impregnated CA and Wal-Mart Loctite I mentioned earlier in this thread are two exceptions I can think of.
I hope this helps a bit.
Kenny
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Re: Superglue
Thank you Kenny,
Sorry for the late reply have been busy with a number of issues and haven't been here as often as I once was.
Yes your comment/reply is very helpful, forgive me I'm new to the use of these adhesives and was getting feed back to others that have used these products and their/your experiences with them.
Once again, yes it helps and I thank you for your reply
Joe
Sorry for the late reply have been busy with a number of issues and haven't been here as often as I once was.
Yes your comment/reply is very helpful, forgive me I'm new to the use of these adhesives and was getting feed back to others that have used these products and their/your experiences with them.
Once again, yes it helps and I thank you for your reply
Joe
Re: Re:
I found it when I ran out of the 'hobby' CA.....complained to my son who menages a Rite Aid and he said he sells a lot of Gorilla CA so I tried.....15 minute drive to Rite Aid was better than 3 hours to hobby shop (needed it ASAP) Worked so well just stayed with it.
Re: Superglue
... but is this Gorilla glue actually made from gorillas? And if so.. how long before PeTA gets involved?
Naoto Kimura
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Re: Superglue
I've use Zap for years, and hated the stuff. The bottle lasts much longer than most. The Devil's Brew. It has uses to be sure. But I never use it if sheer forces are going to be in play. From the recommendations Gorilla will be tried.
One use is to soak cardboard or wood. The end result is a fibrous plastic. I've used this to make whole models. The auto industry used to use it for rapid prototyping.
A friend of mine, William Wardorp, is the master of this. Check him out here. He taught me the method. He has made working submarines from raw cardboard.
One use is to soak cardboard or wood. The end result is a fibrous plastic. I've used this to make whole models. The auto industry used to use it for rapid prototyping.
A friend of mine, William Wardorp, is the master of this. Check him out here. He taught me the method. He has made working submarines from raw cardboard.
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Re: Superglue
The Gorilla glue has a superior cap to Zap. Lasts much longer and rarely, I've been using it for years, clog up. Mercury Adhesives is even better but harder to find.
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