richardabeattie
Well-Known Member
Discovered it in a locker! Does it have any practical use on a boat? What does hot glue achieve better than any other woodglue?
You can pull the joint apart, so handy for things you want to remove, fixing wires to bulkheads etc. Perfect for sealing heat-shrink [Later] see above.What does hot glue achieve better than any other woodglue?
Yes, I forgot about this. I made a cardboard template that was undersized, then stuck on bits of cardboard to fit the profile.Very handy when making up a template to fit a difficult shape, e.g.new locker to hull side - just use lots of small bits of thin wood and glue them together...
Are there different glue sticks for different purposes or are they all the same?
Heres one use:
When making soldered joints on wires, or soldering terminations etc.
1 slide on heat shrink sleeve and put it out of heats way.
2 solder the joint
3 apply a thin layer of hot melt glue layer over the bare soldered section.
4 wait for it to cool down.
5 slide heatshrink over the section and apply heat.
The heat will melt the glue again at same time it shrinks the sleeve. it will extrude the excess out and you will know you have a water resistant soldered joint!
Step 4 is crucial as, if you are impatient like me you slide the heat shrink over too soon and the residual heat in the glue shrinks the material befor you have it positioned properly..........
There may be other uses on board, but thats why i own a hot melt glue gun.
cheers
I see guns at 190C and guns at 130C ... mine is 170C !
They dont seem to mention the melting point in the specs for the glue sticks...