nick mulder
Member
- Joined
- May 15, 2005
- Messages
- 1,212
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heh,
so I've been using spray adhesive lately, seems to work especially well on the leather interior (suede) to plastic strip connection, especially if the plastic has a bit of tooth to it (quick belt of coarse sand paper)... It also works wonders on the interior material (satin in my case) to leather connection, which is in between the strips and the triangle strip 'voids' around the corners (which allow more compact folding) - for whatever reason it is not so hot on satin to strip stickiness...
I tried on a book binders advice good ol' PVA which soaked very well into the leather but a day later I could pull off the plastic strip about a smidge easier than I could the spray adhesive (3M or Ados brand). It left a nice smooth PVA surface on the suede.
Now I understand that such direct tensile pull-apart forces are never placed on the bellows, so maybe its a silly test - the real forces are of the shear variety when you invert the bellows if you made it inside out, but then here's the biggy that concerns me the most:
TIME
Forgetting my process for now - I'm keen to learn yours
so I've been using spray adhesive lately, seems to work especially well on the leather interior (suede) to plastic strip connection, especially if the plastic has a bit of tooth to it (quick belt of coarse sand paper)... It also works wonders on the interior material (satin in my case) to leather connection, which is in between the strips and the triangle strip 'voids' around the corners (which allow more compact folding) - for whatever reason it is not so hot on satin to strip stickiness...
I tried on a book binders advice good ol' PVA which soaked very well into the leather but a day later I could pull off the plastic strip about a smidge easier than I could the spray adhesive (3M or Ados brand). It left a nice smooth PVA surface on the suede.
Now I understand that such direct tensile pull-apart forces are never placed on the bellows, so maybe its a silly test - the real forces are of the shear variety when you invert the bellows if you made it inside out, but then here's the biggy that concerns me the most:
TIME
Forgetting my process for now - I'm keen to learn yours
- Which glues will stand the test of time?
- Can glues fight each other chemically ? (I noticed black paint for instance greatly reduced the efficacy or the spray adhesive)
- It's often hard to apply pressure over the large areas effectively, especially if you are not making it flat (with a form or without) - how do you account for this ? Are any glues better at drying/curing without pressure?
- what glues do you use ? (chemical or generic type if possible please, we don't all live in the same place, so branding may not be the same)