Hello all,
Could you please give me the brand name of strongest and fastest setting glue for tips, i have used Tweeten 10 Min Cement, but it takes much longer than 10 min to harden. Thanks.
From my experience the strongest glues are the slower setting ones. Tweeten is very slow setting and that is why alot of cue repair people tend to not use it these days but nothing welds a tip on like properly set Tweeten.
Most of the crazy glue types of fast setting glues seem to be too brittle when they set and cracks form over time and the tip can come loose. Almost every tip job I have seen using fast setting glues end up with areas between the tip and ferrule that do not properly set that are obvious when the tip is finally removed. You end up with gaps and air pockets that not only have the chance of making the tip come loose completely but those gaps also screw up the hit of the cue.
Naji -
I am not a cue maker.
I buy three tubes of Super Glue (regular or gel) for a dollar at my local Dollar Store. I sand the end of the ferrule and back of the tip, apply a drop of glue to the back of the tip, spread it evenly, attach the tip to the ferrule, and hold it firmly in place for 30+ seconds.
After installation I sand and shape the tips, apply a wipe of beeswax to the ferrule and side of the tip, and burnish them vigorously with a piece of heavy brown paper. Takes 20+ minutes. When finished, appearance is 8- 9 out of 10 compared to a professional tip installation with a lathe.
I have installed 20+ tips this way in the last two years. They are all still working fine. Solid hits with no gaps or loosening. Works for me.
Rick
Hello all,
Could you please give me the brand name of strongest and fastest setting glue for tips, i have used Tweeten 10 Min Cement, but it takes much longer than 10 min to harden. Thanks.
Naji -
I am not a cue maker.
I buy three tubes of Super Glue (regular or gel) for a dollar at my local Dollar Store. I sand the end of the ferrule and back of the tip, apply a drop of glue to the back of the tip, spread it evenly, attach the tip to the ferrule, and hold it firmly in place for 30+ seconds.
After installation I sand and shape the tips, apply a wipe of beeswax to the ferrule and side of the tip, and burnish them vigorously with a piece of heavy brown paper. Takes 20+ minutes. When finished, appearance is 8- 9 out of 10 compared to a professional tip installation with a lathe.
I have installed 20+ tips this way in the last two years. They are all still working fine. Solid hits with no gaps or loosening. Works for me.
Rick
naji:
You might want to post this in the "Ask the Cuemaker" forum:
http://forums.azbilliards.com/forumdisplay.php?f=22
Personally, I don't mind a long set time for glue. I personally like the polyurethane glues (e.g. "Gorilla Glue" or Elmer's version of it, which I like better because it doesn't harden inside the bottle as readily as Gorilla Glue does). The nice thing about the polyurethane glues is that they use water to activate -- you moisten both the ferrule's surface and the glue-side of the tip before applying the glue. Then, clamp it tight. As the glue activates, it expands and fills all the little crevices inside the bond. You will have the glue "bleed" out from under the tip -- which you'll have to carefully trim -- but the bond is amazing. That glue bonds to just about everything, including the slickest of plastics (e.g. phenolics).
However, you asked about which is the fastest-setting, right? I hear that Loctite's Gel cyanoacrylate glues are extremely fast-setting and strong:
Again, this is a good question for "Ask the Cuemaker."
Hope this is helpful,
-Sean
this is the best stuff for applying a cue tip
I also use the CA glue from my .99 cent store... I'm always concerned with shelf-life although I store it in a refrigerator. ... That way I'm always assured that the glue is fresh
naji:
You might want to post this in the "Ask the Cuemaker" forum:
http://forums.azbilliards.com/forumdisplay.php?f=22
Personally, I don't mind a long set time for glue. I personally like the polyurethane glues (e.g. "Gorilla Glue" or Elmer's version of it, which I like better because it doesn't harden inside the bottle as readily as Gorilla Glue does). The nice thing about the polyurethane glues is that they use water to activate -- you moisten both the ferrule's surface and the glue-side of the tip before applying the glue. Then, clamp it tight. As the glue activates, it expands and fills all the little crevices inside the bond. You will have the glue "bleed" out from under the tip -- which you'll have to carefully trim -- but the bond is amazing. That glue bonds to just about everything, including the slickest of plastics (e.g. phenolics).
However, you asked about which is the fastest-setting, right? I hear that Loctite's Gel cyanoacrylate glues are extremely fast-setting and strong:
Again, this is a good question for "Ask the Cuemaker."
Hope this is helpful,
-Sean
CA from the 99 cent store is probably far from "fresh"... their turn around time is horrible and they probably bought it from a company that went out of business, so it is many years old by the time they put it on a shelf (and not stored refrigerated during all that time).
Also, storing sealed CA in a fridge will extend its' shelf life, but not after you open it... the moisture in a fridge is horrible for an opened bottle of CA.