- Member since
May 2008
- From: Wyoming Michigan
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Posted by ejhammer
on Tuesday, March 17, 2015 9:27 PM
Sig Bond has been around for years. I used to use it for building wood aircraft frames in the day of Balsa/doped tissue paper airplanes. It was fuel proof so spilling motor fuel on the plane wouldn't damage it. I still use it for building wooden model ships. I usually put a puddle of super glue on the glass plate I work on at the bench, and pick up small amounts for application, cleaning the glass later with a razor blade. I did that with Sig Bond, but when I scraped it off the glass, it actually took flakes of the glass off the surface leaving tiny pits in my work surface. That stuff really sticks!
EJ
Completed - 1/525 Round Two Lindberg repop of T2A tanker done as USS MATTAPONI, USS ESSEX 1/700 Hasegawa Dec 1942, USS Yorktown 1/700 Trumpeter 1943. In The Yards - USS ESSEX 1/700 Hasegawa 1945, USS ESSEX 1/700 Dragon 1944, USS ESSEX 1/700 Trumpeter 1945, USS ESSEX 1/540 Revell (vintage) 1962, USS ESSEX 1/350 Trumpeter 1942, USS ESSEX LHD-2 as commissioned, converted from USS Wasp kit Gallery Models. Plus 35 other plastic and wood ship kits.
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