phixer
Active Member
Hello
Ive seen this topic come up a few times before but the detailed process of actually joining acrylic still seems to be somewhat of a mystery to most people Ive talked too. I think that a detailed technical discussion of this subject would benifit a great many of us and our hobby as a whole, possibly increasing the number of DIYers once people actually know how to do it properly. When bonding two acrylic panels using the two part epoxy method, are the two pieces actually welded/fused/melted together in the same way same way that cementing them does?, i.e capillary method using acrylic cement? Some manufacturers prefer this method to capillary bonding. They say its stronger. I know the process is much different but does the 2 part epoxy actually melt the two separate acrylic panels together into one in the same manner that cementing does? Im asking because I have heard that salt water can attack joints bonded using the capillary method. But if the cement actually fuses the two pieces together molecularly like a weld, how would the joint be any more succeptable or vulnerable to salt water? Is the 2 part epoxy method stronger? Is it because the 2 part method uses an even amount of adhesive producing a more uniform bond where as the capillary method just soaks into the crevices unevenly? I.e uneven WELDING vs even GLUING, wouldnt this defeat one of the atributes of acrylic bonding? Which one is stronger? Should the edges be left rough for the cement to grab on to? like bare metal before primer? If the edges are beveled and finished smooth before joining them then wouldnt the capillary method be stronger because of the molecular bond? I have several large panels to join so the soak method wont work. I will be doing some testing and will pass along what my findings are. If anyone else can contribute please jump in, your input is valuable to our hobby.
Thanks again
Phixer
Ive seen this topic come up a few times before but the detailed process of actually joining acrylic still seems to be somewhat of a mystery to most people Ive talked too. I think that a detailed technical discussion of this subject would benifit a great many of us and our hobby as a whole, possibly increasing the number of DIYers once people actually know how to do it properly. When bonding two acrylic panels using the two part epoxy method, are the two pieces actually welded/fused/melted together in the same way same way that cementing them does?, i.e capillary method using acrylic cement? Some manufacturers prefer this method to capillary bonding. They say its stronger. I know the process is much different but does the 2 part epoxy actually melt the two separate acrylic panels together into one in the same manner that cementing does? Im asking because I have heard that salt water can attack joints bonded using the capillary method. But if the cement actually fuses the two pieces together molecularly like a weld, how would the joint be any more succeptable or vulnerable to salt water? Is the 2 part epoxy method stronger? Is it because the 2 part method uses an even amount of adhesive producing a more uniform bond where as the capillary method just soaks into the crevices unevenly? I.e uneven WELDING vs even GLUING, wouldnt this defeat one of the atributes of acrylic bonding? Which one is stronger? Should the edges be left rough for the cement to grab on to? like bare metal before primer? If the edges are beveled and finished smooth before joining them then wouldnt the capillary method be stronger because of the molecular bond? I have several large panels to join so the soak method wont work. I will be doing some testing and will pass along what my findings are. If anyone else can contribute please jump in, your input is valuable to our hobby.
Thanks again
Phixer