Can titebond glue be used for glueing in a core?
Wood glue works best when what you are gluing is under pressure, so unless you use a tapered core that essentially gives you a morse taper fit, I would use PU glue or epoxy if you can maintain tight tolerances.
I use epoxy for piece of mind, but I do agree that modern wood glues is much stronger than what they had back in the day, how it works with oily woods I don't know and why take the risk when epoxy is cheap and readily availableI was surprised when I looked into this. That really doesn't seem to be the case. One study was getting similar results between epoxy and pva on tight, medium, and loose fit joinery.
That said, they weren't gluing cocobolo.
I use epoxy for piece of mind, but I do agree that modern wood glues is much stronger than what they had back in the day, how it works with oily woods I don't know and why take the risk when epoxy is cheap and readily available![]()
Why is it tight?Gluing maple cores into dymondwood type forearms. Tight fitting cores.
Make sure the woods are seasoned, cores too.Gluing maple cores into dymondwood type forearms. Tight fitting cores.
If you think you can get a 14-15" dowel thru a 12" handle/forearm without it binding up halfway thru....go ahead. In my experience, Titebond 2 will grab so quick you won't even get a 1/4 thru...titebond 3.....maybe about 3/4 thru before binding. Maybe using a press to do it, and watering down the glue....but then that weakens the glue's ability to do it's designed job.Can titebond glue be used for gluing in a core?
Simple answer No. The cue may buzz. Tight bond will not expand slightly to fill an annulus gap inside.Can titebond glue be used for gluing in a core?
Simple answer No. The cue may buzz. Tight bond will not expand slightly to fill an annulus gap inside.
Tight bond is a great glue and very strong in a face to face clamped static joint.
Absolutely. When I first started I beta tested with epoxy west system and had a cue buzz so I went to the gorilla glue and have been very happy as I have full cored over 150 cues since without a problem.
If you wish to use epoxy look at Bob's (DZ Cues) method. He preps his dowels in a way to get the gap filled inside the cored piece.
My best experiences with trial and error have been trying methods others say can't or shouldn't be used with slight variations to overcome what the stated problems are. These type of threads are good for a starting point of building mock ups and maybe trying some things you wouldn't otherwise have. Sometimes the silliest questions or opinions can spark an idea. But I have never been one to take any one's word on the "right way" to build cues.Coring and Glues are like a broken record here. Past the basic common sense, most won't really understand the impact your glue and tolerances have, until you invest YOUR time and material.
It still needs epoxy.to.fill.up.the gaps.A very easy way to avoid the buzz is a threaded connection. I use a 3/4-8 threaded dowel to connect my a-joint. Doesn't even need glue to stop the buzz.
It still needs epoxy.to.fill.up.the gaps.
That's for temporary joinery bro.Are you sure about that? Carom cues use a wooden joint pin and they don't epoxy those together every time they use them.