Not having a credit card handy (meaning: I'd have to walk from where the
thought struck me, approximately 30 feet into the house), I spotted a
wall outlet cover in a misc hardware drawer that looked like a likely
candidate for spreading glue on some 4" boards. Poured on the TBII and
took a swipe with the cover across the board. Wow! Nice even coverage.
gotta love the curved edge of those covers. Try it some time--it's
not as weird as it sounds.
What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
Dave
David wrote:
> Not having a credit card handy (meaning: I'd have to walk from where the
> thought struck me, approximately 30 feet into the house), I spotted a
> wall outlet cover in a misc hardware drawer that looked like a likely
> candidate for spreading glue on some 4" boards. Poured on the TBII and
> took a swipe with the cover across the board. Wow! Nice even coverage.
> gotta love the curved edge of those covers. Try it some time--it's
> not as weird as it sounds.
>
> What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
Well, I don't know if it's odd, but I use an autobody filler spreader.
R
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
>
The drill size template from the Handyman Club works well.
But with a college student, I get a lot of those mock credit cards to use,
too.
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected]
says...
>
> What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
>
> Dave
For pva I use a stiff 1/2" artist's brush most of the time. I also have a
number of very thin, 6" long hardwood wedges that were left over from some job
or another, they flex beautifully and get into narrow spaces and they clean up
with a sharp chisel. For Gorilla glue, my preference is formica coated 1/4" mdf
tags. I seem to have inherited quite a lot of offcuts of this nature from
someone (don't use the stuff myself). Gives me the required very thin and even
application.
-P.
--
=========================================
firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com
- Hacksaw blades work pretty well. Different TPI and new vs. old will
leave a different thickness of glue.
- Serrated edge thing from a Saran Wrap or aluminum foil box.
- Gift cards from Barns&Noble. They are nice and stiff just like a credit
card and they give them away by the dozens, just don't load them with any $.
- Popsicle sticks.
- Q-tips.
- Pipe cleaners.
Art
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Not having a credit card handy (meaning: I'd have to walk from where the
> thought struck me, approximately 30 feet into the house), I spotted a
> wall outlet cover in a misc hardware drawer that looked like a likely
> candidate for spreading glue on some 4" boards. Poured on the TBII and
> took a swipe with the cover across the board. Wow! Nice even coverage.
> gotta love the curved edge of those covers. Try it some time--it's
> not as weird as it sounds.
>
> What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
>
> Dave
I keep a deck of playing cards handy, they are slick and the glue
doesn't stick to them.
--
Richard,
Richard L. Rombold
WIZARD WOODWORKING
489 N. 32nd. St.
Springfield, Or .97478
Take a look at my mess and work.
http://www.PictureTrail.com/gallery/view?username=thewizz
"Do not meddle in the affairs of Dragons, for thou art crunchy and taste
good with ketchup"
On Sun, 26 Mar 2006 08:07:34 -0800, David <[email protected]> wrote:
>What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
All kinds of stuff from the edge of pencils to random scraps of wood
that happened to be close, to a scraper that I accidentally grabbed
once, thinking it was a credit card. Luckily, the glue wipes off.
Probably the weirdest thing I ever used was an old AOL CD when I was
trying to spread glue into an odd curve and I found that by turning
the CD a bit, it filled the cove quite well.
On Sun, 26 Mar 2006 08:07:34 -0800, David <[email protected]> wrote:
>Not having a credit card handy (meaning: I'd have to walk from where the
>thought struck me, approximately 30 feet into the house), I spotted a
>wall outlet cover in a misc hardware drawer that looked like a likely
>candidate for spreading glue on some 4" boards. Poured on the TBII and
>took a swipe with the cover across the board. Wow! Nice even coverage.
> gotta love the curved edge of those covers. Try it some time--it's
>not as weird as it sounds.
>
>What "odd" thing have you spread glue with, that worked well?
>
>Dave
I'll use my finger to spread glue provided I have a tub of water handy
to clean up. The last time I used a thin 2x4" square of cherry, just
because it was handy. I have a glue roller (the kind that fit on top
of a glue bottle) but don't always use it. I like credit cards for
spreading glue, nice and flexible.