I've used it. It works extremely well but has limitations. It's not an adhesive really, it fuses to the plastic, so two flat surfaces stuck together won't stick. It's more like a weld joint, but with zero penetration. It'll only stick where the UV light gets to it, so you kinda have to build up new material around the joint.
I have not used the stuff, but I find it interesting. If you use it, please tell us your thoughts.
I've used it. It works extremely well but has limitations. It's not an adhesive really, it fuses to the plastic, so two flat surfaces stuck together won't stick. It's more like a weld joint, but with zero penetration. It'll only stick where the UV light gets to it, so you kinda have to build up new material around the joint.
Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
Got good reviews. You've used it ?
I have not used the stuff, but I find it interesting. If you use it, please tell us your thoughts.
I’m glad to see Devcon finally hitting the regular stores. I’ve used their ceramic industrial epoxy in the past and it was fantastic. More like a poltice than a goo that runs on a vertical surface
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
How do your embed a pin inside the glass frame? Drill? How do you melt with solder iron on the outside?If I was fixing glasses like that I’d put my epoxy on first the quickly set a pin along the inside middle of the frame .Then heat with a hot soldering iron till it’s buried in the plastic. After that add some epoxy wrapped in a slight bulge.
I’ve done just enough plastic welding to know 3 things. It reeks. It is so much harder than any sort of metal welding. Last, if you want any strength embed some metal reinforcement just like concrete. Pins, small nails, aluminum screen ect. Behemoth you watch the pros on YouTube that metal rebar is their secret sauce. Plastic Welding may be hard but putting in reinforcing is quite easy[emoji847]
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk