life_hacks:glue
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| life_hacks:glue [2025/11/01 21:13] – [Other] admin | life_hacks:glue [2025/11/20 16:36] (current) – [Other] admin | ||
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| Typically composed of acrylate or methacrylate monomers and oligomers, along with photoinitiators. When exposed to UV light, the photoinitiators generate free radicals that rapidly polymerize the monomers into a solid plastic-like material forming a a strong, clear bond within seconds. | Typically composed of acrylate or methacrylate monomers and oligomers, along with photoinitiators. When exposed to UV light, the photoinitiators generate free radicals that rapidly polymerize the monomers into a solid plastic-like material forming a a strong, clear bond within seconds. | ||
| UV glue is ideal for glass, plastics, and electronics, | UV glue is ideal for glass, plastics, and electronics, | ||
| + | |||
| + | ====== Hot glue ====== | ||
| + | |||
| + | Hot glue is often used in hot glue guns with different temperatures. There are all kinds of different sticks with different temps for different materials. \\ | ||
| + | (EVA thermoplastic) | ||
| + | |||
| + | - consider ski repair sticks as hot glue \\ | ||
| + | - you can even burn thermoplastics with a lighter (e.g. zip ties) and let use the melted plastic: be aware that it gets brittle \\ | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| ====== 2-components ====== | ====== 2-components ====== | ||
| Line 233: | Line 243: | ||
| ===== Play-dough ===== | ===== Play-dough ===== | ||
| # | # | ||
| - | ===== Other ===== | + | |
| + | ====== Other ====== | ||
| * Think outside the box: Ski repair sticks are good for filling cracks/ | * Think outside the box: Ski repair sticks are good for filling cracks/ | ||
| - | * Pattex: There is a solvent-free version which needs pressure to fixate. | + | |
| + | |||
| + | * There is glue for nearly every material with different compositions: | ||
| + | * Vulcanizing glue for rubber: Commonly used on bicycle tires. Roughen the surface with sandpaper first | ||
| + | * ceramics, aka elephant glue | ||
| + | * wood glue (PVA / aliphatic resin) – hard, rigid joint | ||
| + | * fabric / textile adhesive (sticks to wood too but remains highly flexible) | ||
| + | * contact cement aka "Pattex" (stays flexible): There is a solvent-free version | ||
| + | * Silicone adhesive / sealant can be used as flexible glue and is waterproof | ||
| + | * Latex-based glue – very flexible, | ||
| + | * PU (polyurethane) glue – flexible | ||
| + | * Rubber cement – flexible, peelable | ||
| + | * Acrylic polymer emulsions (PVA-like but stronger, more weather-resistant); | ||
| Fun Facts: | Fun Facts: | ||
| - | * Regular Pattex glue will " | + | * Regular Pattex glue will " |
| * Post-it glue was originally developed for super strong adhesive but was discovered by accident and remained unused until the invention of the sticky note. \\ | * Post-it glue was originally developed for super strong adhesive but was discovered by accident and remained unused until the invention of the sticky note. \\ | ||
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