lukebozek1 wrote:Sounds like Cyano glue, which I use on occasion. The thin stuff will flow by capillary action into a tight joint. I would rather use Testors, Ambroid the old standby or right now SIGMENT a SIG product. The CA will attach you to anything you work on and the thin stuff will flow uphill to my fingers, really. This thicker, or gap-filling stuff doesn't flow as bad and it seems easier to put a spot on parts than the other thin material. A lot of people are using white glue, Elmers, and they get great results. But if I hadn't built a plane in 40 years, you are starting off with one interesting kit that I just finished (4 months). Go to Virtual Airodrome and check out some of the other builds. To get the CA off you fingers use a flat fingernail file, the flexible ones from CVS. I use them to sand balsa, but they clear my skin from the dried CA which I always get between fingernails and on fingers.
SteveM wrote:If you search this forum for "glue" you'll find a few threads discussing the various glues people use and why. Here is a link to one of them: http://balsamodels.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?t=1511
I personally have cold-like symptoms to CA glue fumes if I breath in too much over a period of time so I limit my use of CA glue to instances where the parts are difficult to clamp well or I'm in a hurry. When gluing metal to wood I use epoxy. When gluing wood to plastic I'll often use a canopy glue (dries clear and won't frost your canopy like CA will).
For general wood to wood assembly I prefer PVA type glues such as Elmer's white glue or Titebond wood glue. They are cheap, strong, sandable, and give me lots of time to get the parts positioned. I've tried Ambriod and the Testor's wood glues like lukebozek1 mentioned but struggle to get strong joints with it.
Grab a few scraps of wood and try some different glues and see which you like best.
Scott67 wrote:Steve, Bob Smith Industries makes an odorless CA glue. The PVA glues are okay but they are not very strong. If you have the patience for glue to set the wood glues like Titebond II is very good for woods. I like the CA's with a skirt of Instra-Set or accelerant. When applying CA I go to the hobby shop and get little pipettes or eye droppers with fine tips. They help in putting the CA exactly where you what it and there is a chance of your fingers getting stuck.
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