hey Guys, Glenn here. I know their probably is no good answer to this but does anyone know a good way to mend a broken glass button. it shattered clean in 3 pieces. any suggestions besides the ol' super glue trick. any thoughts/info would be greatly appreciated. thanks, Glenn
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Hi Glenn,
I'd use a fast setting two part epoxy resin? Superglue is good for some things but in this case something with a bit of time to work with would be helpfull.Also, resin dries clear and can be cleaned off with thinners (or even trimmed with a knife if a bit of 'ooz' is present) whereas Cyano might leave that wonderfully innapropriate frosting.
Good Luck
Mark.
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yes, the original stitching is still super strong on whats left of the button. it has a good third left remaining with the other two parts broke clean off. I will try a 2 part apoxy. I really didnt want to replace it as like said, it still has original stitching. what a figgin' bummer that was when it broke. I almost cried. thanks for the tips Guys. Ill give a before/after pic when Im done to let you know how it turned out. luckily (if there is a good side ) it was a trouser fly button that cannot be seen when displayed. I guess better that than a full view button. hopefully Ill post some good results soon. Glenn
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Originally posted by Glenn Barbaritz View Postyes, the original stitching is still super strong on whats left of the button. it has a good third left remaining with the other two parts broke clean off. I will try a 2 part apoxy. I really didnt want to replace it as like said, it still has original stitching. what a figgin' bummer that was when it broke. I almost cried. thanks for the tips Guys. Ill give a before/after pic when Im done to let you know how it turned out. luckily (if there is a good side ) it was a trouser fly button that cannot be seen when displayed. I guess better that than a full view button. hopefully Ill post some good results soon. Glenn
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Glen,
Go to an autoglass shop and ask for some two part glue that they use for gluing rearview mirror tabs on windshields with. I believe it's a loctite product and has a primer and a resin. The primer is a spray but it can be daubed on with a q-tip or disposable hobby brush to keep everything neat. The primer acts as the catalyst for the second part which is a thin resin. Pre fit the parts in the order they go together and glue each one seperately in succesion. The bonds form in about 15 to 30 seconds. Enough time to properly align each part in turn. The cured bond is extremely strong for the amount of surface it covers if the two parts have been properly cleaned before gluing.
An auto parts shop may have smaller individual packets that may be more economical but I'm not sure if they are as strong as the industrial type.
When using any type of glue cleanliness is the key to good adhession. As with any glue bond the thinner the glue line the stronger the bond.
Hope this helps.
TonyAn opinion should be the result of thought, not a substitute for it.
"First ponder, then dare." von Moltke
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