Titebond II is good stuff
Titebond II is good stuff
"titeblonde" in the shop
Titebond II as Elitopus suggests is what i use these days as my supply of the original Borden product is now long gone.Glue suggestions, for wood working NOVICEs ??
To make a short story long, i live in the little home town of the world famous Elmer's Glue. The Borden Chemical Laboratories were located here in my village until the mid/late 1970's. Titebond II is a licensed version of the original alphatic resin based Elmer's Carpenter's Wood Glue which was developed in the lab here, made in the chemical processing factory at the east edge of the village, and packaged in their packaging facility just outside of the village. The laboratory building and the resin plant are long gone now, the factory building opposite the laboratory property on Johnson Street still stands and is privately owned by a jewlery manufacturer who valued the building for it's huge vault which used to house the master formulas and patent documentation for all of Borden's Chemical products. The 120,000 sq ft packaging facility is now an auction house that specializes in construction/building materials, nothing of Borden's remains here today except chemically contaminated ground water and landfills.
Not all vegetables make good leaders.
"titeblonde" in the shop![]()
+1
Reporting back on the use of Glop:
I added an extra rib in the center of each flare, parallel to the two existing ones. After it dried, I used the knuckle test. Better with the rib, but I wanted to go further.
I glued a few wedges in to the existing ribs where they had developed gaps to the curved plywood section. I found Loctite PL Premium polyurethane construction adhesive to be perfect for the wedges and to secure the additional ribs. Spans gaps, dries hard, holds very well. Wear gloves!
I mixed the Glop and applied it to the flares 1/4" deep. I treated only the sections adjacent to the new center rib, as the ribs form a dike to hold the Glop.
It took 2 days to stop being runny, and 5 to dry to a semi-hard condition at 75F and 65% humidity. Maybe it will stiffen further.
It works. No ringing and a solid thump when the knuckle test is used.
The Glop is a messy operation and it doesn't dry pretty. As it dries it cracks and looks like the surface of Mars. According to North Creek, this is expected.
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