What adhesive do you use on one piece cores. tried one type expoxy did not results
Do one piece cores actually stay straight for any period of time? I've found it's hard enough to keep shafts straight at 29" let alone 58".
Dick
Do one piece cores actually stay straight for any period of time? I've found it's hard enough to keep shafts straight at 29" let alone 58".
Dick
What adhesive do you use on one piece cores. tried one type expoxy did not results
Do one piece cores actually stay straight for any period of time? I've found it's hard enough to keep shafts straight at 29" let alone 58".
Dick
I'll go out on a limb and say you should save the superglue for your tips
...with that said, for wood to wood joinery PVA glues like Tightbond are pretty hard to beat, both in bond strength and price.
If you decide to go with a PVA, the only advice I can offer is to turn your coring dowel down maybe fifteen to twenty thousandths under your bore<---learned that the hard way doing my first segmented handle![]()
I'll go out on a limb and say you should save the superglue for your tips
...with that said, for wood to wood joinery PVA glues like Tightbond are pretty hard to beat, both in bond strength and price.
If you decide to go with a PVA, the only advice I can offer is to turn your coring dowel down maybe fifteen to twenty thousandths under your bore<---learned that the hard way doing my first segmented handle![]()
You probably needed that much clearance because of the PVA glue. As the wood starts to absorb the moisture in the glue, it starts to become thicker before you get the core in the piece.
With gorilla glue, you have 20 minutes working time and it is a little slicker. You might not need that much clearance. Plus gorilla glue expands 4 times to fill all gaps.
On a segmented handle cue I glued on each segment and the ring set for that section using gorilla glue. great stuff!!
Kim
That aticle is also available here...I quit using Gorilla Glue (or any other expanding polyurethane foam glue) for coring - haven't for several years after I had a front fail while cutting V-points.
Some time ago (2007 ?) Fine Woodworking magazine conducted serious documented testing of various adhesives, as referenced in this video:
http://www.finewoodworking.com/Materials/MaterialsArticle.aspx?id=28853
If you have a chance to read the article you should. I know Gorilla Glue is very popular for coring because of its ease of use and apparent gap-filling capabilities, but after reading the test results not only am I convinced I made the right decision I also think it may actually be the worst choice for coring adhesive. The data doesn't lie.
TW
The test did not include dowels and cylinders.
I once gorilla glued 4 inch dowel on a hole about 3 inches long so I can hammer it.
Two days after gorilla gluing it, I chucked up the piece with the dowel sticking out.
I have hammered several times .
The dowel did not budge.
I bandsawed it after and examined the inside.
It was tight.
Imagine if you threaded the dowel on top or bottom . That glue will be nothing more than a gap filler as mechanically, the dowel shouldn't move.
8 to 10 thou for epoxy?
I don't know Joey, I had originally bored my segments @ .760 (for a .750 core) and by the time i got the tightbond on my glue surfaces they swelled up to the point the pieces weren't going together. At .765, with my core wood in a soft jaw vice, i still had very little working time to index my segments and rings.
Keep in mind, this was my first time coring anything, but the end result seems good so far - the piece feels very solid. If it matters, it was PH over oak with fiber & maple deco rings which imo are porous enough materials to justify using a PVA glue.
EDIT: I think Kim's explanation above is a bigger factor than what I explained with regard to PVA in this application. It does thicken up & get tacky fast.