Hi guys I have used different liquid glue application systems ie Deluxe with great success as I can be a messy glue applier at times . I decides to try the Flexifile Touch and flow applicator with their own plast-I-weld ,WARNING when the liquid is in the applicator and it is horizontal its ok but the moment you tilt it in anyway a large droplet can appear just as you touch the plastic the capillary action of the product is very fast compared to other products so be careful when applying it as I have got caught out with it and ended up with too much glue on the joint which is the total opposite of what i am trying to achieve .
WARNING -using Flexifile glue aplicator
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Guest
I threw mine away Steve. Found it more of a hindrance than a help.
I use Tamiya Thin or Mr Cement S which both have a brush for application. I found it much easier to use.
Laurie -
Guest
Their sanding products (flexi file) are excellent. However, I find their glue applicator to be way too expensive for what it is. I just use the BSI extra thin cyanoacrylate glue, and that is just as good as the flexi file stuff.
JohnComment
-
I have tried lots of glues from the ones you get with starter kits and progressed up to the revell needle point. Then I started using tamiya thin and Mr hobby cement S and to be homest unless I'm needing ca glue these two are all I use now.
Regards
RobertComment
-
Guest
Agree with all on liquid poly! That tamiya stuff is used for by far the majority of my gluing, and it seems to never go down!Comment
-
Originally posted by \Agree with all on liquid poly! That tamiya stuff is used for by far the majority of my gluing, and it seems to never go down!Comment
-
Guest
Yeah I thought that'd be the case! I'm too scared of spilling it to be slipshod about the lid, that stuff would melt the entire underlay of my room in a split second - a bit like nail polish remover, but did they listen? Did they ....Comment
-
Guest
i am the opposite, i use the touch n flow constantly, i think its great, but use ema plastic weld in it as it is far cheaper..in fact it is pretty much the only way i glue nowComment
-
Guest
-
Guest
-
Guest
Laurie. Apologies as I have only just seen your comment. The site is great but has an amazing amount of threads.
Faller Super Expert. Made by the German firm Faller who produce plastic kits for model rail. Can I suggest you pick up their catalogue which also includes lots of items for scenery etc along with their glue. There are dealers in England who should be able to help. Gaugemaster comes to mind. The plastic cement is the best I have used along with Tamiya Thin.
The cement is available in the UK but if you have a problem finding it let me know and obtaining their catalogue I am sure you will find interesting including their fairground items. They also do trees and hedges and walls etc by the hundred.
As I said let me know if you are interested and have a problem finding their stuff as I will be ordering from Germany in a few weeks and can add anything you want to my order.
david (Benhur)Comment
-
It seems I'm becoming an exception nowadays in that I still like, and use traditional tube cement, especially for large joints like wing & fuselage halves, and wing & tailplane to fuselage joints
I tried a Revell glue applicator, the blue thing, but didn't think much of it so I just used it to top up my bottle of Humbrol liquid glue, the only type generally available at the time
Now that I have recently returned to model making I'm also using Tamiya Extra Thin and Mr Cement S, mainly because the bottles have proper tops, and not those fiddly childproof things. The narrower brushes is also a point in their favour
I have added some chopped clear sprue to the Tamiya Extra Thin to make it thicker than the usual liquid glue, but not as thick as tube glue. This means it doesn't flow all over the place like water
I also use a technique I developed when I was a teenager in the 1960s, and liquid glue was unheard of. I mounted a pin on the end of an old paintbrush handle, and squeeze out a small blob of tube glue onto a scrap of card or a piece of glass. Then I can pick up a very small of glue with the pin; it can be applied to small components quite accurately without it flowing all over the placeComment
Comment