Rick Butters wrote:
Mike is asking the right questions -
What is the material?
Where is the broken part (load bearing, cosmetic only, etc)?
If the plastic is a thermoplastic, I would not recommend using an epoxy. An acrylic adhesive would be a better choice.
If the material is a thermoset plastic (less likely), you can use an epoxy, acrylic, or a urethane adhesive.
Hey Rick - not familiar specifically with acrylic adhesives -- is there anything avaulable off-the-shelf? Or something I already have in my glue drawer? Do you know what the solvent base usually is for acrylic adhesives? I'm also starting to wonder what "kind" of glue superglue is.
Rodney - that's a "tough break" and I'm not sure how I'd handle it. My first thought would be to use some black drywall screws on the back section where it is relatively flat (I'd drill a large hole though the first section and a small pilot hole though the back part), in combination with the "perfect" adhesive on the side piece, whatever that may be. But again my gut tells me that adhesive alone won't get the job done unless you can find a way to mechanically augment the repair. But I could be wrong!
Anyways it is an interesting repair. If you're into that kind of thing (as I am, as strange as that may be:) )
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Mike Whitney
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