User Tools

Site Tools


life_hacks:glue

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
Next revision
Previous revision
life_hacks:glue [2025/11/01 21:44] – [Hot glue] adminlife_hacks:glue [2025/11/20 16:36] (current) – [Other] admin
Line 228: Line 228:
  
 - consider ski repair sticks as hot glue \\ - 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 240: Line 243:
 ===== Play-dough ===== ===== Play-dough =====
  #TODO: missing \\  #TODO: missing \\
-===== Other =====+ 
 +====== Other ======
  
    * Think outside the box: Ski repair sticks are good for filling cracks/holes of plastics too. Just make sure you tape non-melting and non-flammable material on the other side, so the plastics will not deform! \\    * Think outside the box: Ski repair sticks are good for filling cracks/holes of plastics too. Just make sure you tape non-melting and non-flammable material on the other side, so the plastics will not deform! \\
-   Pattex: There is a solvent-free version which needs pressure to fixateGenerally, Pattex is awesome for flexible materials, as it will not get rigid and stays flexible. \\ +      flaming thermoplastics (e.g. zip ties) with a lighter for plastics repair (it gets brittle though) \\ 
-   * There is glue for nearly every material: + 
 +   * 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       * ceramics, aka elephant glue
-      * fabric / textile adhesive (sticks to wood too but remains flexible) 
       * wood glue (PVA / aliphatic resin) – hard, rigid joint       * wood glue (PVA / aliphatic resin) – hard, rigid joint
-      * mounting adhesive +      * fabric / textile adhesive (sticks to wood too but remains highly flexible) 
-      * silicone can be used as flexible glue too+      * contact cement aka "Pattex" (stays flexible): There is a solvent-free version too which needs pressure to fixate.  
 +      * Silicone adhesive / sealant can be used as flexible glue and is waterproof 
 +      * Latex-based glue – very flexible, used for fabrics and paper crafts 
 +      * PU (polyurethane) glue – flexible to semi-rigid, gap-filling, moisture-curing; often used in mounting adhesive 
 +      * Rubber cement – flexible, peelable 
 +      * Acrylic polymer emulsions (PVA-like but stronger, more weather-resistant); can be painted over
  
 Fun Facts:  Fun Facts: 
    * Regular Pattex glue will "melt" through styrofoam (expandable polystyrene foam (EPS)) and deform polystyrene (PS) as it contains [[life_hacks:glue#solvent_cement|solvents]] \\    * Regular Pattex glue will "melt" through styrofoam (expandable polystyrene foam (EPS)) and deform polystyrene (PS) as it contains [[life_hacks:glue#solvent_cement|solvents]] \\
    * 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. \\
life_hacks/glue.1762029886.txt.gz · Last modified: by admin

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki