Styrene cements and construction
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Styrene cements and construction
Talk amongst yourselves.
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Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moratati
Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moratati
Tenax
Since Tenanx comes in a bottle with no application, What is the best way to apply tenax to joints?
-TONY
"Second star to the right and straight on till morning."
- Captain James T. Kirk
"Second star to the right and straight on till morning."
- Captain James T. Kirk
Re: Tenax
I have two old single '0" brushes I used for applying Tennax. They've survived some 8 years.raist3001 wrote:Since Tenanx comes in a bottle with no application, What is the best way to apply tenax to joints?
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I really like the capillary applicator, though for things like wing leading edges it can be hard to control, making the brushes more attractive.
http://www.ehobbytools.com/en-us/dept_7.html
Flex-i-file calls it their Touch-n-flow applicator.
http://www.ehobbytools.com/en-us/dept_7.html
Flex-i-file calls it their Touch-n-flow applicator.
Raised by wolves, tamed by nuns, padded for your protection.
Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moratati
Terry Miesle
Never trust anyone who says they don't have a hobby.
Quando Omni Flunkus Moratati
- Mr. Badwrench
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I use
I use an old draftsmans ruling pen, like these.
http://www.reuels.com/reuels/page429.html
Cheers,
Max Bryant
http://www.reuels.com/reuels/page429.html
Cheers,
Max Bryant
- Jonas Calhoun
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I bought a touch n flow at a hobby shop's closing sale. Much easier to control for long seams than a brush. Not quite in the 'how did I get along without it' category, but quite useful nonetheless.
I've only used with the Tenax and Microscale's Micro weld. The Tenax was hot enough that it worked very well, the micro weld less so. It doesn't evaporate quite as fast, so I had to move the applicator faster (more fluid would come out, and flood the area). Just a matter of getting used to it is all.
Dan
I've only used with the Tenax and Microscale's Micro weld. The Tenax was hot enough that it worked very well, the micro weld less so. It doesn't evaporate quite as fast, so I had to move the applicator faster (more fluid would come out, and flood the area). Just a matter of getting used to it is all.
Dan
"Laugh while you can, monkey boy!" -- Lord John Whorfin
Re: I use
I've probably got half dozen bow pens floating around here (drafting tool junkie) and have thought about using them to appy glue. How well do they work? Do you need to clean glop off the end very often?mightymax wrote:I use an old draftsmans ruling pen, like these.
http://www.reuels.com/reuels/page429.html
Cheers,
Max Bryant
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Use Ambroid's ProWeld. It'll glue ABS to styrene, styrene to styrene,ABS to ABS, and even works with acrylic. Dries super fast too. I decant it into a Mr. Cement bottle, I've had way too many spills over the years when it's in the original tall bottle. The Mr. Cement bottles are short, square bottles that you really have to work at knocking over. I haven't had one spill since I started doing it.
To apply I use the brush in the bottle. I use an xacto to cut the bristles at an angle so that it forms a sharp point, perfect for getting into small nooks. I also have a syringe I use, but only occasionally.
For resin I use JB Weld after pinning. You'll break the resin part before a JB Weld joint lets go. Takes overight to dry, but it's well worth the wait.
I use CA only occasionally. I used to use it exclusively, but found that after a few years it gets really brittle and the slightest bumps to my models caused parts to pop off left and right. After fixing model after model, I stopped using it for building.
Erin
<*>
To apply I use the brush in the bottle. I use an xacto to cut the bristles at an angle so that it forms a sharp point, perfect for getting into small nooks. I also have a syringe I use, but only occasionally.
For resin I use JB Weld after pinning. You'll break the resin part before a JB Weld joint lets go. Takes overight to dry, but it's well worth the wait.
I use CA only occasionally. I used to use it exclusively, but found that after a few years it gets really brittle and the slightest bumps to my models caused parts to pop off left and right. After fixing model after model, I stopped using it for building.
Erin
<*>
I've become very fond of the black CA. Sands nicely, fills well. It's only real flaw is it can take overnight for it to fully cure.
Nothing quite like glopping some on, hitting it with accelerator and then going to cut through it with the Dremel and hitting that gooey center. Way fun.
Nothing quite like glopping some on, hitting it with accelerator and then going to cut through it with the Dremel and hitting that gooey center. Way fun.
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- Jonas Calhoun
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Re: I use
[/quote]
I've probably got half dozen bow pens floating around here (drafting tool junkie) and have thought about using them to appy glue. How well do they work? Do you need to clean glop off the end very often?[/quote]
As far as cleanup of the ruling pen. Really I seldom ever get any glop on them. when I do get a little dried melted styrene on them I simply open the apature a little wider and run my #11 blade through it and it pops right off.
As far as how it works. I think it works great. I load up the pen and place it where I want to start the glue application. I then pull it back along the seam and the glue flows out of the pen and into the seam.
I have a touch and flow and another bottle type applicator. My problem with the TnFlow is it is long and gangly and there are times I have lost control of it and the tool goes places I did not want it to. Couple that with the fact that if you pick up a TnFlow the glue forms a globule at the tip. This means as soon as I touch the seam I feel I have to much glue!
Also when my TnFlow runs dry I sometimes have a problem getting it to refill with glue.
Nope my drafting pen is irreplaceable.
Cheers,
Max Bryant
I've probably got half dozen bow pens floating around here (drafting tool junkie) and have thought about using them to appy glue. How well do they work? Do you need to clean glop off the end very often?[/quote]
As far as cleanup of the ruling pen. Really I seldom ever get any glop on them. when I do get a little dried melted styrene on them I simply open the apature a little wider and run my #11 blade through it and it pops right off.
As far as how it works. I think it works great. I load up the pen and place it where I want to start the glue application. I then pull it back along the seam and the glue flows out of the pen and into the seam.
I have a touch and flow and another bottle type applicator. My problem with the TnFlow is it is long and gangly and there are times I have lost control of it and the tool goes places I did not want it to. Couple that with the fact that if you pick up a TnFlow the glue forms a globule at the tip. This means as soon as I touch the seam I feel I have to much glue!
Also when my TnFlow runs dry I sometimes have a problem getting it to refill with glue.
Nope my drafting pen is irreplaceable.
Cheers,
Max Bryant
Works like a charm
asenna wrote:Hey Mightymax,
How are those draftsman pens work? I have never seen one in operation. I would guess they don't plug into a USB port?
Very simple. You adjust the nib (point) with the thumbscrew. The wider the nib is apart the more glue will flow. I usually do not have mine open very wide. Once you have a comfortable flow set at the nib you simply dip the pen into the bottle of cement. When you take it out you have glue loaded in the tip and it will not go anywhere until you place it where you want it and pull along the seam.
I will add this. If you use a ruling pen make sure it has a handle that will not be affected by the model cement. I use one that has a wood handle.
I bought one once and it was plastic and did not like my Weld On.
It is a simple task to replace the plastic handle with a wood dowl.
Cheers,
Max Bryant
- Mr. Badwrench
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Re: I use
Hey Robb, next time we are at a CoMMiES meeting and Mike Jacobs is there, ask him. I'm pretty sure he uses one all the time.kylwell wrote:I've probably got half dozen bow pens floating around here (drafting tool junkie) and have thought about using them to appy glue. How well do they work? Do you need to clean glop off the end very often?
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
I'll add my support to the syringe. Even with the smallest brush I have, I always got glue everywhere. With about 10 minutes of practice with the syringe, I was putting glue exactly where I wanted it.
I got mine at a farm supply store (Tractor Supply Company). You should be able to buy them at veterinary supply stores, also, or possibly from a vet.
I got mine at a farm supply store (Tractor Supply Company). You should be able to buy them at veterinary supply stores, also, or possibly from a vet.
Reeek reeeeek.
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I'd been using a very small brush which was a major PITA - after reading this thread i quickly made up a syringe with the ultra-fine blue tip from Deluxe Materials "Pin Point" glue syringe pack (its pretty much like a rotring pen nib, not quite that fine but not far off it):
Absolutely works a treat, so much easier, faster, cleaner and more precise - now if i can replace the syringe with a small "squeezy" bottle i'll be even happier.
I'm using "Plastic Magic" as the glue at the moment and having some difficulties with .25mm styrene which is actually metling through no matter how little you use on it. Is that a general problem with that thickness of styrene or is this glue i'm using just far too aggresive?
Absolutely works a treat, so much easier, faster, cleaner and more precise - now if i can replace the syringe with a small "squeezy" bottle i'll be even happier.
I'm using "Plastic Magic" as the glue at the moment and having some difficulties with .25mm styrene which is actually metling through no matter how little you use on it. Is that a general problem with that thickness of styrene or is this glue i'm using just far too aggresive?
It's just too agressive. I've taken to using CA or some lite glue for paper thin styrene.Antenociti wrote:I'm using "Plastic Magic" as the glue at the moment and having some difficulties with .25mm styrene which is actually metling through no matter how little you use on it. Is that a general problem with that thickness of styrene or is this glue i'm using just far too aggresive?
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I'll try another liquid cement i've just got in then (Slater's Mek-Pak) and if that's the same switch to a CA.
This is the fine glue needle tip FTI: http://www.barrule.com/ebaybitz/cimg0324.jpg
This is the fine glue needle tip FTI: http://www.barrule.com/ebaybitz/cimg0324.jpg
Hmmm...this looks like the place.....
Right I have a glue problem.
I tried to glue a plastic rawl plug to a piece of soft plastic, kind of like a drinks bottle.
At first I used polystyrene cement but it didn't take at all.
So I tried super glue. Nope, no effect.
So I tried 2 part epoxy.
Nothing.
I sanded both surfaces lightly and tried super G again.
Nope.
Is there such a thing as two different types of plastic that just will not ahdere to each other?
The soft plastic of the bottle and the hard plastic of the rawl plug?
Help!
Right I have a glue problem.
I tried to glue a plastic rawl plug to a piece of soft plastic, kind of like a drinks bottle.
At first I used polystyrene cement but it didn't take at all.
So I tried super glue. Nope, no effect.
So I tried 2 part epoxy.
Nothing.
I sanded both surfaces lightly and tried super G again.
Nope.
Is there such a thing as two different types of plastic that just will not ahdere to each other?
The soft plastic of the bottle and the hard plastic of the rawl plug?
Help!
He tasks me! He tasks me and I shall have him!
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- Mr. Badwrench
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What is a rawl plug? Is it made of a vaguely waxy, translucent white plastic? If so it is probably polypropylene, the same stuff they make super glue tubes out of. Polyethylene is similar, they are both very inert, nothing will react with them. Most solvents won't touch them, methylene chloride, (Tenax or Ambroid), Testors cements, lacquer thinner, etc. And they are almost completely non-porous, so super glue can't get a bite. That's why CA tubes are made from them, instead of glass.There is something else aboyt them that prevents CA from adhering, I don't know how it works, chemistry is a complete mystery to me.
The nice thing about these plastics is, they are real easy to cast. Pour in a casting resin and slosh it around. Like anything else, it won't stick to the plastic. But it should make a pretty accurate reproduction of the bottle, you'll just have to cut the bottle and peel it off.
The nice thing about these plastics is, they are real easy to cast. Pour in a casting resin and slosh it around. Like anything else, it won't stick to the plastic. But it should make a pretty accurate reproduction of the bottle, you'll just have to cut the bottle and peel it off.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
My project is the 22" E and I am concerned about the two halves of the engineering hull splitting in the future ( I'm gluing the ship together. Not doing the cutaway version).
So my question is, which glue would be better for the job?
Tenax or Ambroid?
I'm looking for a glue with holding power! I just want to glue this part and the saucer section once. Don't want to deal with gluing it back together again sometime in the future because it came apart!
So my question is, which glue would be better for the job?
Tenax or Ambroid?
I'm looking for a glue with holding power! I just want to glue this part and the saucer section once. Don't want to deal with gluing it back together again sometime in the future because it came apart!
- Mr. Badwrench
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Tenax and Ambroid are almost exactly the same. The active ingredient is methylene chloride. (So don't drink it). To really keep your hull from splitting, try reinforcing it from the inside with plastic strips. Glue little strips all along the inside of one hull half, hanging over the edge, and let the glue cure. Then put the two halves together and glue them from the inside. I'm pretty sure the way the engineering hull is put together will allow you to do this. If you're really paranoid, (like me), you can further reinforce the joint with fibreglass.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
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Rather than relying strictly on glue to hold the two halves together have you considered gluing a bulkhead or two inside the hull ?starmanmm wrote:My project is the 22" E and I am concerned about the two halves of the engineering hull splitting in the future ( I'm gluing the ship together. Not doing the cutaway version).
So my question is, which glue would be better for the job?
Tenax or Ambroid?
I'm looking for a glue with holding power! I just want to glue this part and the saucer section once. Don't want to deal with gluing it back together again sometime in the future because it came apart!
"Well--we'll be safe for now--thank goodness we're in a bowling alley--"
Have done the styrene strip thing in the past. I don't have the kit in front of me, but I'm not sure that the insert (that has the shuttlebay and bulk of the engineering section) will allow for this little trick.
Humm, gluing the insert to the hull may help.
I'm just concern that once glued and I start sanding the seams, it just my crack due to the pressure of sanding.
Humm, gluing the insert to the hull may help.
I'm just concern that once glued and I start sanding the seams, it just my crack due to the pressure of sanding.
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I have heard this before. Is this the entire mix,or is there another ingredient?Mr. Badwrench wrote:Tenax and Ambroid are almost exactly the same. The active ingredient is methylene chloride.
I recall once reading that there was a certain chemical you could buy in gallon containers, and it would last forever as a styrene cement.
I thought i'd post this here for info.
I go through a lot of polystyrene cement, and i'm looking for a mix i can brush on when building up many layers in a short time.
Answers on a postcard to the usual address...
Bar.
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