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:thumbup: AT PRO: shopping for super glue! :garrett:

Good idea. Cyanoacrylate, super glue, is also used to finish pool cues. I am told they spin the shaft on a lathe and apply the glue as it spins.
Also heard of it being used in surgery.
I use it daily in my work, and have used it to glue up small cuts on my hands. It does sting, a little.

Found this with a search...
Thin CA glue also has application in woodworking. It can be used as a fast drying, glossy finish. The use of oil (such as boiled linseed oil) may be used to control the rate at which the CA cures. CA glue is also used in combination with sawdust (from a saw or sanding) to fill voids and cracks. These repair methods are used on piano soundboards, wood instruments, and wood furniture

Thanks for the tip, SJ
 
epoxy filled...............new style ............new this and new that

like the bionic man...........stronger and thinner, maybe no need for a coating.

i am a coater..............have used marine epoxy for 5 or 6 years..............all my coils are coated..........except two..........and new sef for se pro and below.

BUT, i am waiting to see how my At Pro coil holds up under beach hunting and sand scraping scenario................for me
 
Yeah it's been used in surgery for years. Nothing like glueing the old bod back together. HAA. Cops use it ( usually the vapor ) in forensic science to detect different things.

Bill
 
now this is interesting...:clapping:
 
Thanks for that bit of info. I was wondering about that - if it was used to repair mangled corpses and make them presentable. No end to the uses for it.

Bill
 
Towerhobby has the cheapest super glue. I buy a lot of it and epoxy from them. It's their own brand name. All of it is cyanoacrylic. All you have to do is choose your viscosity.
 
Sorry no pictures, no machine here yet.

I used the three for a dollar stuff and the little bottle with the red cap. I suggest using a brush because you can do the job quickly. Use one small tube per application, the bottom of a pop can is a suitable container. My first shot at it was squirting some on and trying to spread it out with the tip. What a mess and real stinky too. It would take forever in many applications and then I had to try to sand down the high spots to make it look pretty.


I like the idea of a low viscosity glue and I think as long as you can keep the brush wet, it will not get stuck. I am sure there is a way to do it in a strait forward way and I will ask a friend that makes pool sticks what he thinks will work. Right now it is an idea that needs a little improvement to get r dun. Maybe a slow cure low viscosity glue would be a good start but like anything, it
 
lasergod said:
I heard of truck bed liner spray works real good. Walmart for 8 bucks.

That's what I use. A quick spray at the beginning of the season, and I'm Good to go.
(Just make sure that it doesn't contain any metal. Some paints use metallic powders.)
 
I have my truck bed sprayed and its some tuff stuff for sure i throw tree stands,wood all kinds of junk into it and it still looks like it just got sprayed
yesterday,If it last like that it should be a great cover for coils too! and it protects the truck bed from denting easily too
 
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