What glue?
Collapse
X
-
Tags: None
-
I use Revell Contacta for larger structural parts & Tamiya Extra Thin ( TET ) for the smaller bits. As Dom says - fine wire ( from s stripped back electric cable ) will clear blockages - and stand the glue bottle up & put the cap on!
Just as a by the by - the Yellow cap on the Contacta bottles is a left-hand thread, for those of you attempting to remove it!!!
DaveComment
-
I use that Contacta, as well as TET and the standard white top Tamiya liquid cement https://www.scalemodelshop.co.uk/40m...QaAkgXEALw_wcB
I've never had much luck clearing the Contacta needle with wire, but a lighter flame burns it clear. (Gave up smoking 20+ years ago but I still have a couple of lighters!)
PeteComment
-
Ha, I just tried that over the cooker hob, and it worked. Thanks, Dom.Comment
-
Thanks, Dave & Peter.
I'll carry on with this glue for now, but it looks like I'll have to get a couple of others to try.
Onwards & upwardsComment
-
I use two types of cement for plastic to plastic.
Mostly I use an extra thin type of cement, which you apply to a join by brush so the cement is drawn into the join by capillary action to weld a joint together. I do this for over 80% of plastic to plastic joins. It is great for fuselage halves and large pieces as well as smaller pieces. I mostly use Gunze Mr Cement S or Mr Cement SP for this which I find to be better than Tamiya Extra Thin which is very popular.
The other type of plastic glue needed is one that takes a little longer to dry. I use this when I find it more convenient to apply cement to a mating surface, usually smaller parts that need to fit to an awkward place and be held there. For this I use Mr Cement DeLux.
There are two more types of glues needed.
1/ Superglue or cyrano, useful for etch and other metal parts and, sometimes, to get a quick ‘hold’ between two plastic parts (to which extra thin can then be added in places where you didn’t apply the c.a.). I actually have three types of c.a., thin, medium and thick each having it own uses.
2/ A pva type of glue. This is useful for transparencies or to hold some etch or 3D Decal detailing parts. Gator Grip is my preference here.Comment
-
Thanks, Barry.
I did think about appliying with a brush ( I guess the brush would be cleaned with thinners?)
I remember the old tubes I used to use back in the day and getting in a right old mess :anguished:Comment
-
when people say heat up the tube with a flame make sure you have pulled it out of the bottle first!!........its flammable stuff
i pull it out with pliers and hold over a flame......it will go pop and sometimes a flame
personally i mostly use ca...........occasionally a liquid poly like Tamiyas........either pva or ca for clear bitsPer Ardua
We'll ride the spiral to the end and may just go where no ones beenComment
-
Sound advice already from the guys already..Comment
-
I tried one of those things a few years ago, and yes, it blocked up on me
I wasn't keen on it anyway, so I pulled out the steel tube with pliers, and emptied the contents into a bottle of liquid glue, and I've never used a glue dispenser since
Tube glue, liquid glue, and the glue in dispensers can all be mixed with each other
Similarly, if you have an ancient battered tube of glue that you no longer use, you can squeeze that into a bottle of liquid glue.
If you do mix the glue the viscosity might change
I've just seen that the dispenser has a left hand thread, which explains why I had to use pliersComment
-
Guest
Over 30 years ago, my best friend at the time used Contact with that needle applicator for his models, and despite not smoking, always kept a cigarette lighter handy to unblock it
As for what I use to glue with, maybe a little under 30 years ago, someone tipped me to buy 250 ml tins of a thinner/degreaser commonly sold in hardware stores here in the Netherlands, as that works very well to glue model kit parts. Pour it into an empty bottle with brush, that liquid model cements normally come in, and you can just keep refilling the bottle any time you need it. The tins cost (back then and now) about as much as a 40 ml bottle of model cement.
I used that for decades and am very happy with it. Maybe two years ago, I decided to buy a bottle of Tamiya Extra Thin, and found it works better for some things and not as well for others, so now I have two bottles of glue. Mainly, the TET doesn’t evaporate as fast, so it’s better for glueing small parts together where I need to put a dot of glue on one side and then press the other part to it. When the TET ran out, I found out what it’s actually made of, and decided to buy 100 ml bottles of the two ingredients, mixing them 50/50 when needed. Again, because I’m cheap in this regard: those two bottles including postage set me back about as much as a bottle of TET with postage but hold about five times as muchComment
-
Another one using Contacta for big joints, it gives wriggle room and a good ooze to fill joints. I use TET or EVA (very similar, but sometimes easier to source) for smaller ones. Never cleared the nozzle using heat though, the steel wire in brass picture hanging wire works a charm for unblocking. The most important thing is to put the cap on either of them as soon as you use them though, both evaporate very quickly.Comment
-
Comment
Comment