Thank you so much, Zack & Scott! Prior to your responses, I talked with a mechanical engineer/fit-it enthusiast (my dad, who would like to know, numerically, what tensile strength is optimal) and he suggested black 3M 5200 Marine Sealant. Perhaps this will be overkill, but it was inexpensive and it's applied & curing now. Zack, you had me wondering about the high heat, since I also do color processing, but I believe the 5200 is rated to 190 F (88 C). I will certainly keep both of your suggestions in mind if this fix doesn't take!
j. On Wed, Apr 26, 2023 at 6:24 PM Scott Dorsey <[email protected]> wrote: > It'll be ugly but you might try the marine epoxy from JB Weld. I don't > know > what the filler is, but it's white and it's not steel powder like the > regular > JB Weld. It fills voids well, it takes a long time to set, but it's not > very reactive and once it's set it's fine with most photochemistry. It > will > adhere to phenolic as well as anything ever will, but you might consider > scraping the edges up with fine steel wool or etching them with 409 cleaner > (butyl cellosolve) which will pit the surface and make it dull enough to > provide a good tooth for an adhesive. > --scott > > > -- > Frameworks mailing list > [email protected] > https://mail.film-gallery.org/mailman/listinfo/frameworks_film-gallery.org >
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