Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card scale
which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The card has
come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used when it was
made?
I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it will
stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the back
of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
too thick.
Any thoughts?
"Ledz" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
> experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card scale
> which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The card has
> come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used when it was
> made?
> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
> arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it
> will
> stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the
> back
> of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
> brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
> too thick.
> Any thoughts?
>
Clean very well - Super glue
Dave
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On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 19:16:13 GMT, B a r r y <[email protected]> wrote:
> Mike Berger wrote:
>> I use 3M clear spray adhesive for this kind of thing.
> 3M77 reminds me of thinned, sprayable, rubber cement.
Yup. Slightly different smell, but sure acts the same.
Michael Daly wrote:
> On 7-Oct-2005, "Ledz" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Any thoughts?
>
> Double-sided tape - archival quality - from an art store.
> It should stick just fine and the adhesive won't damage
> the card now or in the future.
>
> Mike
Good suggestion.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
Someone in another group suggested shellac, and I think this is the way to
go- will try it later today. I've nothing against more modern techniques,
just want to try and do it as the makers would have done. Also shellac
should be reversible if things go pear shaped.....
Thanks for all comments
Regards Francis
"dadiOH" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:h4y1f.29$at1.23@trnddc05...
> Ledz wrote:
>> Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
>> experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card
>> scale which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The
>> card has come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used
>> when it was made?
>> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as
>> "gum arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't
>> think it will stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will
>> be all over the back of the card and won't come off easily- card
>> needs to stick closely to the brass to stop things getting jammed -
>> the extra glue layer may make things too thick.
>> Any thoughts?
>
> PVA actually sticks well to metal but - as you said - it could mess up
> the card. Not so much by a remainder if you have to take it off
> (probably wouldn't be able to do so) but by wetting the card in the
> first place.
>
> Offhand, I think of two things...
>
> 1. Use the PVA but put it just on the metal and let it dry. Once dry,
> iron on the card with a hot iron (PVA is thermoplastic). That would
> obviate the potential problem of a liquid messing up the card.
>
> 2. Use spray contact adhesive like that used for mounting graphics (you
> can get it at a framing shop). I don't think it will stick as well as
> PVA but should be OK. If you needed to remove the card, lacquer thinner
> is the solvent. Which might mess up the card's printing.
>
> Someone suggested cyanoacrylic (Super Glue); personally, I wouldn't use
> it in this case. Someone else suggested rubber cement...should be safe
> but I have doubts about how well it would stick.
>
> --
> dadiOH
> ____________________________
>
> dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
> ...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
> LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
> Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
>
>
On 7-Oct-2005, "Ledz" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Any thoughts?
Double-sided tape - archival quality - from an art store.
It should stick just fine and the adhesive won't damage
the card now or in the future.
Mike
Ledz wrote:
> Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
> experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card scale
> which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The card has
> come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used when it was
> made?
> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
> arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it will
> stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the back
> of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
> brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
> too thick.
> Any thoughts?
>
>
spray contact cement?
Dave
I use 3M clear spray adhesive for this kind of thing.
Ledz wrote:
> Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
> experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card scale
> which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The card has
> come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used when it was
> made?
> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
> arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it will
> stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the back
> of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
> brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
> too thick.
> Any thoughts?
>
>
Ledz wrote:
> Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
> experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card
> scale which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The
> card has come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used
> when it was made?
> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as
> "gum arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't
> think it will stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will
> be all over the back of the card and won't come off easily- card
> needs to stick closely to the brass to stop things getting jammed -
> the extra glue layer may make things too thick.
> Any thoughts?
PVA actually sticks well to metal but - as you said - it could mess up
the card. Not so much by a remainder if you have to take it off
(probably wouldn't be able to do so) but by wetting the card in the
first place.
Offhand, I think of two things...
1. Use the PVA but put it just on the metal and let it dry. Once dry,
iron on the card with a hot iron (PVA is thermoplastic). That would
obviate the potential problem of a liquid messing up the card.
2. Use spray contact adhesive like that used for mounting graphics (you
can get it at a framing shop). I don't think it will stick as well as
PVA but should be OK. If you needed to remove the card, lacquer thinner
is the solvent. Which might mess up the card's printing.
Someone suggested cyanoacrylic (Super Glue); personally, I wouldn't use
it in this case. Someone else suggested rubber cement...should be safe
but I have doubts about how well it would stick.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
On Fri, 7 Oct 2005 16:44:51 +0100, "Ledz" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Maybe off subject, but many in this group will have much practical
>experience of adhesives:- I have an instrument which has a thin card scale
>which is attached to a brass plate- made in about 1960 ish. The card has
>come away from the brass- what adhesive would they have used when it was
>made?
>I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
>arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it will
>stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the back
>of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
>brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
>too thick.
>Any thoughts?
>
Go to the 3M site. Lots of good application information on 77,90,
hi-tack76, etc. I've used them all at various times. read the specs
and see which one fits you're application the best.
On 7 Oct 2005 19:18:51 GMT, Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 19:16:13 GMT, B a r r y <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Mike Berger wrote:
>>> I use 3M clear spray adhesive for this kind of thing.
>
>> 3M77 reminds me of thinned, sprayable, rubber cement.
>
>Yup. Slightly different smell, but sure acts the same.
77 is one in a series ranging from post-it-note strength to stuff used
in the assembly of airfoil surfaces in aircraft. 77 isn't the
strongest, but it's toward that end of the range, IIRC
Ledz wrote:
> I have tried simple paper glue ("Gloy" type) - used to be known as "gum
> arabic" - fails . Possibly could use pva type glue but I don't think it will
> stick to metal very well and if I get it wrong it will be all over the back
> of the card and won't come off easily- card needs to stick closely to the
> brass to stop things getting jammed - the extra glue layer may make things
> too thick.
> Any thoughts?
>
A thin layer of rubber cement?