I am attempting to finish the edges of some plywood with birch strips
coated with heat sensitive glue. I used an old steam iron at maximum
temperature (linen) and without steam, and moved the iron slowly along
the board - forward and then backward. I then used a "J" roller to
apply some pressure.
For the most part, it worked well. However, I am finding spots where
the glue did not take - or it released after I put the board away. Is
there something wrong with my technique? It the proper repair - just
re-heat the area, or should I force some wood glue into the spots and
apply clamp pressure?
Thanks,
Len
On May 14, 9:45=A0am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am attempting to finish the edges of some plywood with birch strips
> coated with heat sensitive glue. =A0I used an old steam iron ...
> For the most part, it worked well. =A0However, I am finding spots where
> the glue did not take - or it released after I put the board away. =A0
The joint has to stay in contact while it cools, but has to get hot
enough
to force glue into the open-grain edge. You can reduce the heat
somewhat
by priming the edge with glue (I paint-roller with PVA white glue and
give
it a day to dry), or you can hold the tape in place by sliding a block
after
the iron has passed. In mass production, the hot band goes on, then
the edge presses against an outfeed fence.
The J-roller is fine for contact cement banding. Back/forth ironing
seems unproductive (it only takes ONE heat to do the job).
On May 15, 4:42=A0pm, [email protected] wrote:
> On May 14, 6:52=A0pm, whit3rd <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On May 14, 9:45=A0am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I am attempting to finish the edges of some plywood with birch strips
> > > coated with heat sensitive glue. =A0I used an old steam iron ...
> > > For the most part, it worked well. =A0However, I am finding spots whe=
re
> > > the glue did not take - or it released after I put the board away. =
=A0
>
> > The joint has to stay in contact while it cools, but has to get hot
> > enough
> > to force glue into the open-grain edge. =A0You can reduce the heat
> > somewhat
> > by priming the edge with glue (I paint-roller with PVA white glue and
> > give
> > it a day to dry), or you can hold the tape in place by sliding a block
> > after
> > the iron has passed. =A0In mass production, the hot band goes on, then
> > the edge presses against an outfeed fence.
>
> > The J-roller is fine for contact cement banding. =A0 Back/forth ironing
> > seems unproductive (it only takes ONE heat to do the job).
>
> Thanks for the tips. =A0I found that following the iron with the heavy
> edge of my 12" machinist square on the tape drew enough heat away to
> get the glue to set.
You should also experiment with the heat setting. You're looking for
that sweet spot between the heat setting and the speed with which you
feel comfortable moving the iron.
R
<[email protected]> wrote in message
> Thanks for the tips. I found that following the iron with the heavy
> edge of my 12" machinist square on the tape drew enough heat away to
> get the glue to set.
If you're having trouble with the iron on type of edge banding, you could
try the straight veneer wood type that you apply your own white carpenter's
glue. I've used both and while the iron on type is convenient to use, the
apply your own glue type holds better in my opinion. The options with it are
to use finger pressure for about a minute in any spot, use edging clamps or
perhaps a strip of wood clamped against the veneer.
On May 14, 12:45=A0pm, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am attempting to finish the edges of some plywood with birch strips
> coated with heat sensitive glue. =A0I used an old steam iron at maximum
> temperature (linen) and without steam, and moved the iron slowly along
> the board - forward and then backward. =A0I then used a "J" roller to
> apply some pressure.
>
> For the most part, it worked well. =A0However, I am finding spots where
> the glue did not take - or it released after I put the board away. =A0Is
> there something wrong with my technique? =A0It the proper repair =A0- jus=
t
> re-heat the area, or should I force some wood glue into the spots and
> apply clamp pressure?
>
> Thanks,
> Len
The J-roller does not cool the heated tape enough to allow the
adhesive to 'set'.
After the J-roller leaves, the tape just lifts again.
The best 'heat-sink' to use is a chunk of flat metal. It presses the
tape in place, and removes the heat.
Since I no longer own an edge-bander, I now use a 2" wide strip of
Corian, about 4-6" long and use it as a 'cold iron'.
A piece of granite or another smooth stone works well too.
If you're planning on doing a lot of this, try to find an old iron
without the holes. Plug it in, let it heat up, and unplug. Wait a
couple of minutes and spray with Top-Coat. As the iron cools, the
TopCoat gets trapped in the porosity of the iron's shoe and will stay
slippery for a long time.
On May 14, 6:52=A0pm, whit3rd <[email protected]> wrote:
> On May 14, 9:45=A0am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I am attempting to finish the edges of some plywood with birch strips
> > coated with heat sensitive glue. =A0I used an old steam iron ...
> > For the most part, it worked well. =A0However, I am finding spots where
> > the glue did not take - or it released after I put the board away. =A0
>
> The joint has to stay in contact while it cools, but has to get hot
> enough
> to force glue into the open-grain edge. =A0You can reduce the heat
> somewhat
> by priming the edge with glue (I paint-roller with PVA white glue and
> give
> it a day to dry), or you can hold the tape in place by sliding a block
> after
> the iron has passed. =A0In mass production, the hot band goes on, then
> the edge presses against an outfeed fence.
>
> The J-roller is fine for contact cement banding. =A0 Back/forth ironing
> seems unproductive (it only takes ONE heat to do the job).
Thanks for the tips. I found that following the iron with the heavy
edge of my 12" machinist square on the tape drew enough heat away to
get the glue to set.
Len