little shack
Well-Known Member
Hi folks just a quick one.Wanting to glue a a loosening piece of rubbing strake will clamp in place untill it goes of.what do you wood experts use.Thanks
Gorilla glue from B&Q brilliant stuff and in small quantities.
Gorilla glue from B&Q brilliant stuff and in small quantities.
Was very impressed by Gorilla glue when i saw it being used to scarf in a new section of rubbing strake ( that's "Gorilla Glue", which I think is a polyurethane not "Gorilla Wood Glue" which is a PVA) Foams as it cures so needs to be well clamped.
Other wise I would use epoxy ( Araldite non-rapid)
+1 for Gorilla Glue. Wonderful stuff. Sticks almost anything to almost anything else, fills gaps, sands easily, cure is unaffected by temperature and in my experience bond strength is excellent.
Don't get it on your fingers or you'll have sticky fingerprints everywhere, and nothing removes it.
polyurethane glue is IMHO the only glue to use on wood. straight epoxy can be brittle and crack as wood expands and contracts when the wood gets wet. If you don't have a tight fitting joint or a gap I use some saw dust of the same wood so the colour of the gap does not show too much.
You Sir seem to be a bodger, if you dont mine me saying so![]()
polyurethane glue is IMHO the only glue to use on wood. straight epoxy can be brittle and crack as wood expands and contracts when the wood gets wet. If you don't have a tight fitting joint or a gap I use some saw dust of the same wood so the colour of the gap does not show too much.
I've been called Roger the dodger , Roger the lodger but no one who has seen my work has ever called me Roger the bodger before. Thats a new must tell my mates down the marina that one
polyurethane glue is IMHO the only glue to use on wood. straight epoxy can be brittle and crack as wood expands and contracts when the wood gets wet. If you don't have a tight fitting joint or a gap I use some saw dust of the same wood so the colour of the gap does not show too much.