bushwhaker
Established Member
Of course, most of retailers have a MOQ.thanks for that - how do you get it less that £15 due to the delivery costs?
Of course, most of retailers have a MOQ.thanks for that - how do you get it less that £15 due to the delivery costs?
most here use titebond. Even the musical instrument manufacturers did until the rise of the electric guitar forums told everyone that they could hear mushy tone with titebond joints.
Can you see a glue line at all? If so, is its colour somewhere close to red/ brown or purple? If yes, it's probably resorcinol formaldehyde, which is commonly used for bonding veneers used in external grade plywood.... It could be attached with AMG (Asian Mystery Glue). This has baffled luthiers for years, heat doesn't melt it, solvents don't soften it. Some relative of Cascamite??
I'm sorry to bring this up (and show my lack of knowledge) I don't do enough woodworking to know the ins and outs of the various glues mentioned which make me wonder if I should try one but which? In my day to day/occasional woodworking repairs or making small domestic items I use Evo Stik Wood glue in the blue or green plastic bottles (nasty lid to force glue through so I usually undo it and pour or put a brush in), it always does my job and on testing I find that the wood fibres break away and not the glue fails. This glue hasn't been mentioned though.
Perhaps someone would kindly share a view, thanks
Evo Stik sells on its name, it's an old respected brand. It's no better than many others, though, and is expensive for what it is - it's twice the cost of Everbuild D4 (which has better water resistance) and probably three times the cost of 502.I'm sorry to bring this up (and show my lack of knowledge) I don't do enough woodworking to know the ins and outs of the various glues mentioned which make me wonder if I should try one but which? In my day to day/occasional woodworking repairs or making small domestic items I use Evo Stik Wood glue in the blue or green plastic bottles (nasty lid to force glue through so I usually undo it and pour or put a brush in), it always does my job and on testing I find that the wood fibres break away and not the glue fails. This glue hasn't been mentioned though.
Perhaps someone would kindly share a view, thanks
It’s quite a long thread this, a while back I mentioned it and that I have used it almost exclusively for years on the furniture that I have built, the tops are a bit nasty as you say, the trick is to get a smaller one – Expensive but you only need to do it once – and keep refilling it from the litre bottle, if the top gets gunky dismantle and slosh it around in very hot water. IanI'm sorry to bring this up (and show my lack of knowledge) I don't do enough woodworking to know the ins and outs of the various glues mentioned which make me wonder if I should try one but which? In my day to day/occasional woodworking repairs or making small domestic items I use Evo Stik Wood glue in the blue or green plastic bottles (nasty lid to force glue through so I usually undo it and pour or put a brush in), it always does my job and on testing I find that the wood fibres break away and not the glue fails. This glue hasn't been mentioned though.
Perhaps someone would kindly share a view, thanks
Not all! I'm mulling over a neck reset on a friend's acoustic guitar, probably 70s Japan made. It could be attached with AMG (Asian Mystery Glue). This has baffled luthiers for years, heat doesn't melt it, solvents don't soften it. Some relative of Cascamite??
I guess I should ask here, any way of separating a Cascamite (old recipe) joint, short of using a hammer?
I have a 7 foot solid beech bench with three butt joints running its full length. I made it using Cascamite and some biscuits. I made it over 20 years ago and for the last 10 years, it's been leaning against the side of my house outside, uncovered, through intense summer sun and bitter Yorkshire winters. And we get about 27 inches of rain in an average year. No joint has even begun to open up, not even slightly. No movement whatsoever. I like cascamite...I don't like Gorilla glue as it seems to suggest a good bond and then fails under test. When inspecting the joint the foam has covered the surfaces and set hard without bonding. Perhaps I didn't wet the surface well enough!
Does anyone rate Cascamite?
Franklin International in guidance on this topic on their PVA/aliphatic resin adhesives recommend a cramping pressure of 100 lbs per square inch for softwoods and up to 250 lbs per square inch for hardwoods. So, for example when edge gluing solid wood panels set a sash cramp roughly 50 mm in from each end of a panel with the rest of the cramps spaced approximately 150- 200 mm (6"- 8") apart, and alternate the cramps on the bottom face and the top face of the assembly, e.g., three cramps on the bottom face and two on the top of a panel roughly 700 mm (28") long. Alternating the cramps top and bottom helps counteract the panel bowing setting cramps all to one side causes. Additionally we should tighten the cramps as tightly as we reasonably can by hand to achieve the required pressure. It is unlikely a woodworker can exactly match the cramping pressure recommended by the manufacturer, but if you tighten up the toggles or bars on the cramps as hard as you can it is my guess you are unlikely to exceed the recommended pressures.There was a post a while back where it was mentioned that the ideal clamping pressure for PVA was far and away in excess of what could be put on it in a workshop.
Thanks Cabinetman. Very true (boats). I used it only because an old school craftsman and engineer I knew used it to laminate up some boat rudders he was making for an old wooden boat. He said simply that he used it because it would never come apart. Oh, and after I wrote that thing about the bench I started thinking about how much that wood would cost now. Over £1,000 at a guesa as it could be 3 inches thick and about 2 and a half feet wide. Mahogany involved as an edge hasn't faired so well...Welcome Corky, seems a shame to have that nice benchtop out in the rain but it has proved a point for us, Cascamite is waterproof, they’ve been building boats with it for years, and it’s years since I used it last (thank goodness) recent reports on here that it’s not what it was, so a little research probably needed.
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