Searching for something else the other day, I came across this
Probably the first time I tried liquid hide glue. There's a date on the bottle:
and a little bit left inside. Even I am not stupid enough to keep empty bottles!
Time to do an experiment and see if that date really means anything.
Two bits of scrap and some clamps:
and wait until the next day.
It's not much of a test - there's a big, flat glue area.
Out of the clamps the parts were holding together nicely. I put the free end in the vice, ready to get a big hammer and see how strong it was. Before that, I just gave the wide piece a push with my thumbs - and no surprise really - it came off easily.
There's only one little spot where the glue was strong enough to pull the surface off this very soft pinkish wood. (I've forgotten what it is but it used to be popular for window frames.)
The glue is crystalline and crumbles easily with a thumbnail. There is no strength to it at all.
So, apologies to anyone who was hoping for some sort of revelation along the lines that the Titebond company wants to rip off woodworkers by selling glue that lasts for ever and telling them to throw it away. I don't think they are.
I will carry on as I have been doing, and buy a little bottle when I need some, replacing it after a couple of years if I haven't already used it up.
Probably the first time I tried liquid hide glue. There's a date on the bottle:
and a little bit left inside. Even I am not stupid enough to keep empty bottles!
Time to do an experiment and see if that date really means anything.
Two bits of scrap and some clamps:
and wait until the next day.
It's not much of a test - there's a big, flat glue area.
Out of the clamps the parts were holding together nicely. I put the free end in the vice, ready to get a big hammer and see how strong it was. Before that, I just gave the wide piece a push with my thumbs - and no surprise really - it came off easily.
There's only one little spot where the glue was strong enough to pull the surface off this very soft pinkish wood. (I've forgotten what it is but it used to be popular for window frames.)
The glue is crystalline and crumbles easily with a thumbnail. There is no strength to it at all.
So, apologies to anyone who was hoping for some sort of revelation along the lines that the Titebond company wants to rip off woodworkers by selling glue that lasts for ever and telling them to throw it away. I don't think they are.
I will carry on as I have been doing, and buy a little bottle when I need some, replacing it after a couple of years if I haven't already used it up.