acrylic cement

  • Thread starter William Sommerwerck
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William Sommerwerck

Guest
Most of you are probably familiar with acrylic cement. I used it for the first
time recently, and thought it would be good to share my experiences with those
who aren't familiar with it.

The spindle on my record-cleaning machine had broken off, and the repair kit
included a tube of Weldon #16 acrylic cement. After drilling out the hole, I
globbed the cement on the new spindle and stuck it in place. It stuck very
well.

I have a box set of Sinatra recordings with a thick Plexiglas cover. It had
been broken, and the acrylic cement fixed it nicely with no trouble. Which is
no surprise, as Plexiglas is an acrylic.

What did surprise me was the battery cover on a Sony remote control. It had
been split straight down the middle (vertically). As the cover is only 1/32"
thick, I expected problems, and wasn't looking forward to fiddling with epoxy
or Plas-T-Pair. Much to my surprise, the acrylic glue worked.
 
On 12/11/2014, 4:26 AM, William Sommerwerck wrote:
Most of you are probably familiar with acrylic cement. I used it for the
first time recently, and thought it would be good to share my
experiences with those who aren't familiar with it.

The spindle on my record-cleaning machine had broken off, and the repair
kit included a tube of Weldon #16 acrylic cement. After drilling out the
hole, I globbed the cement on the new spindle and stuck it in place. It
stuck very well.

I have a box set of Sinatra recordings with a thick Plexiglas cover. It
had been broken, and the acrylic cement fixed it nicely with no trouble.
Which is no surprise, as Plexiglas is an acrylic.

What did surprise me was the battery cover on a Sony remote control. It
had been split straight down the middle (vertically). As the cover is
only 1/32" thick, I expected problems, and wasn't looking forward to
fiddling with epoxy or Plas-T-Pair. Much to my surprise, the acrylic
glue worked.

Acrylic 'cement' is usually really a solvent. Methylene Chloride is the
main ingredient, the rest of the liquid is designed to slow the
evaporation of this and thicken it up somewhat. It does a good job of
repairing broken plastics that are not Nylon based.

John :-#)#

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"John Robertson" wrote in message
news:gs-dnUEIfJgVSBTJnZ2dnUU7-XWdnZ2d@giganews.com...

Acrylic "cement" is usually really a solvent. Methylene chloride
is the main ingredient, the rest of the liquid is designed to slow
the evaporation of this and thicken it up somewhat.

It says "solvent cement" on the tube. That's why I was surprised that it
worked with plastics that didn't seem to be acrylics.
 

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