About a year and a half ago, I tried using some Amborid brand cement for plastic models. It somes in a white squeeze toob with orange striping.
Anyway, when I got it home, I tried using it on the 1/1000 PL Enterprise. When it cured, it was all yellow. Blah!
Haven't used it since. Still faithful to the Testors black applicator or the Tenax stuff. Good stuff!
Ambroid vs. Testors glue
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- Mr. Badwrench
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Try Ambroid ProWeld. It's liquid, like Tenax or Testor's liquid cement. Has a high methylene chloride content, so it's a good idea to work in a well ventilated area, or wear a respirator. But because of the methylene chloride, it can weld a lot of different plastics.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
- rocketrider
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- Mr. Badwrench
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- Jonas Calhoun
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The orange Ambroid glue is meant for wood models. I've used it on stick-and-tissue free flight birds. Really nice for that sort of thing, but I'd imagine it would stink for plastics. It's meant to get into something somewhat porous and bond that way.
Methinks you got the wrong stuff.
Dan
Methinks you got the wrong stuff.
Dan
"Laugh while you can, monkey boy!" -- Lord John Whorfin
Though it smells faintly of orange, the Ambroid Safe Weld is formulated for plastics, and comes in a blue and green bottle. For me, it works as well as the MEK-based glues without being so noxious. I got mine at Hobby Lobby, but I have also seen it online. I wish it were more widely popular. I've heard of some of the old-timer modelers coming down with liver cancer, so I go for the non-toxic stuff whever I can. Of course I make an exception for the al-clad paints, for which have as much ventilation as possible.
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