Steve
I have been using PU glue for sticking blue styrofoam to wood with very good
results as long as it is used very sparingly and you have good face
contacts. However the strength of the bond between foam and wood is limited
by the glueline thickness and because of the foaming it would be too great
for wood to wood structural joints, my advice: stick to the proven systems
eg. T88 or Aerolite.

Peter Drake
Hereford UK

-----Original Message-----
From: krnet-boun...@mylist.net [mailto:krnet-boun...@mylist.net]On
Behalf Of Steve Jacobs
Sent: 30 August 2006 15:39
To: KRnet
Subject: Re: KR> Gorilla Glue/Urethane Glue results


> I took a damp cloth and wiped both sides of the capstrip to dampen the
> wood, as this glue needs moisture to activate it. I put a bead of glue on
> the
> surface of one side (not both sides like epoxy) of the strip and used a 1"
> brush to spread it evenly across the 3/4" surface.

++++++++++++++++++

I learned something in the early hours of this nice day (about polyurethane
adhesives) that really bothers me.  It has been on my mind (since the recent
discussion) that experienced and knowledgeable netters had also done some
testing of their own - and were not impressed - why?

I was attaching a doubler to a fuselage longeron.  The joint offered plenty
glue area (my psi logic) so I used the polyU.  I have been following the
Forest Products recommended procedure of applying glue both sides, rubbing
together and leaving things open for a few minutes.  This was a mistake on
the day, I guess the RH was just to high.  Everything looked good until I
started clamping up.  By chance I noted a gap (maybe 1/32") and came back
increasing the clamping pressure on all of the clamps.  I say by chance
because as we know, once this glue comes fizzing out of the joint, it hides
the gap unless you wipe and look.

No amount of clamping closed the gap, I assumed that I had something trapped
in there (could not imagine what?) so the messy task of de-clamping and
opening.  There was nothing other than glue?  Presumably a core of the
expanding "film" of glue actually was resisting my efforts to close the gap.

>From my tests I know, ANY gap just leads to a weak joint, so I checked the
other side (glued the day before) - same story.  I shut down the shop and
came to work - another messy task tonight!!

For those that use PolyU, be aware of this tendency /possibility - probably
when there is plenty moisture in the air.

Steve J
South Africa


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