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MMD > Archives > November 1996 > 1996.11.05 > 08Prev  Next


Re: Glue (96.11.04)
By Richard Moody

There is a time and a place for all glues. I have used white carpenter's glue, then yellow carpenter's glue (Tight Bond) called aliphatic resin for all wood to wood joints, from split pin blocks to sound board rib repair. I have used hide glue for wood to wood joints. The people I trained under used hide and carpenter's glue according to the occasion. There are advantages and disadvantages of using any glue. There is an advantage of gluing pneumatics to decks using Tight Bond, or white carpenter's glue. If the pneumatics have been split off then using white glue enables one to see that the glue is truly covering all of the area. The glue is brushed on both pieces, the pneumatic set in its place, then lifted. The distribution of glue is immediatly apparent. Any "misses" can be touched up and the process repeated. You can catch over flow too. Hard to do with hide glue as it sets up too fast.

Rubber cotton pneumatic cloth is always glued with hot glue.

In gluing seperated ribs from sound boards, the glue must be spread in between with a pallet knife. (or ground down hack saw blade) Hard to do with hot glue. No problem with yellow glue. Accoustical properties of the glue? A moot question, the success of the repair is in how bad the sound board was "broken" not how the glue will "conduct" sound. Carpenter's glue works good for seperated veneer. Gives you a lot of time to work it in and set your clamps.

Key bushing felts, the "Old German Master" sized his felt, cut it, then glued it in all with white glue. He learned with hot glue, gave it up for something better.

Back catch leathers? Alway hot glue. Sets real fast.

Ever wonder why traveling papers were never glued in. Couldn't do it with hot glue. However the tiniest wiff of white glue on a voicing needle, and your traveling papers will never travel.

White glue, yellow glue, Tight Bond, aliphatic resin, if its good enough for my mentors and Reblitz, its good enough for me. Just don't confuse Elmer's School Glue with Elmer's White Glue. Tight Bond is better.

Richard Moody ptt


(Message sent Wed 6 Nov 1996, 06:13:50 GMT, from time zone GMT-0600.)

Key Words in Subject:  96.11.04, Glue

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