I just opened the package and used it to glue the first pieces of the the prototype choke cable bracket together. It said on the package 4-5 hours before handling and for complete drying it should sit over night. I cranked up the dehydrator to 130 drgree's and put the parts in. After 5 hours it should be completely cured. I am an old pain in the A$$ but am willing to try new products, JUST NOT NEW CARS!!!! Thanks for the input Lu. I got some expendable rubbery interior plastic I can use it to experiment on and will post the results. "Doc"
--- Begin Message ---Yes it is a wonder material. It does work. Get it. I have used it on
- From: "lumina333" <lumina3@xxxx>
- Date: Tue, 13 Apr 2004 17:52:51 -0000
many many plastic items including door panels, dash pieces, etc.
Softer, rubbery plastics I don't know. It definately works on the
hard plastic stuff
--- In BaadAssGremlins@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, AMC74HORNET@xxxx wrote:
> I have seen this stuff touted as a wonder material. Has anyone used
it?
> I saw soneone on the AMX files useing it in a plastic dashboard and
he
> said it worked just fine. I am still sticking to my Plastic Welding
> System epoxy for hard plastic. But I was wondeing if it would not
work
> on the softer plastic's. Right now I am useing some to cobble up a
choke
> cable bracket in aluminum and steel with plans on when I get a
completed
> bracket to duplicate it in steel. I am mainly useing the aluminum
for
> ease of fabrication and any modification's needed before I make the
> finished product out of 1/8"X 1" steel strap.
> "Doc"
--- End Message ---