I've used that stuff before too. Not sure what it was called, but I used to fix my ball mount on the Sturmtiger. I was doing some sawing on my bench when the vibrations caused my 18V cordless drill to fall on the Sturmtiger. Of course it had to fall on the ball mount and shattered several pieces out of it. That stuff fixed it right up. I also made weld lines on my M5 Stuart tank with it. The working time on the stuff I used was fairly short so I made small amounts of it at a time. In order to make the weld lines, I used a small flat blade screw driver to press it into place. I would dip the screw driver in water or the stuff would stick to it. I would say, it could work for your application since I used it to fill some large gaps and even rebuild the edge of the ball around the gun after the drill accident. Hasn't failed yet and I was able to sand it and dremel it back into the shape I needed. When my rubber hammer got away from me (missed what I was trying to hit - several times) and hit the hull of the Sturmtiger, some of the ply broke. I used that stuff to fill it in and repair it. Good stuff IMHO.
Derek T065 2009/7/11 Chrysanthos Kanellopoulos <[email protected]> > > Araldite for steel! yes, I knew araldite, it is also used for glueing > stones together. Good tip. I fill in gaps and use it as putty, and of > course for securing handles, like you do. > I just did not kow if silicon rubber of some kind, like Kelly suggested, > would hold for a thickness of about 2 mms. > I even thought of using epoxy glue for steel ("cold weld", Bison type) > coated on bandage or fiber cloth, like cement holds on steel nets. This > glue is kind of brittle and "crackable" in thin layers. > I think I'll use Araldite or glue for steel on the stainless steel mesh I > built the vent's grills from. > With Araldite, you can also replicate nicely weld lines on tanks. I use the > kind that bonds after an hour and becomes completely hard after 5 hours in > room temperature. You let lines of it dry a little and then you hit it with > a hard toothbrush, thew same way you use a hammer. And it is not completely > irreversible. Heat it up with a torch and it becomes brittle. You can > then scrape it up and remove it. Fumes are horrible.. > Chrys > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "George Mastoras" <[email protected]> > To: <[email protected]> > Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 9:23 AM > Subject: [TANKS] Re: 7 TP > > > > Here is a product that might be of interest. Its an aryldite (spelling?) > > type product that comes in a 2 part tube that you mix and use. > > > > Dries quick and than can be sanded, filed, drilled etc. > > > > I started using it on my first tank, the ridiculously small T34 in the > > picture for holding the bushes for the road arms, then for securing the > > handles on the sides of the tank and finally for filling in gaps between > > metals and sanding them smooth. > > > > I used this product again a few months ago on the Leclerc. > > On this tank I used it to set the transmission bearings in place inside a > > steel tube that had a weld line internally so apart from machining the > tube > > out this was an easy solution. > > > > I have another longer tube somewhere, was looking for a label for you but > > they fell off but it is made under a few brand names and you would need > to > > get the one suitable for Al. > > > > George Mastoras > > > > > > > > On 11/7/09 5:24 AM, "Chrysanthos Kanellopoulos" <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > > Any suggestions as to how I fill in this gap in the rear? Fibercloth > and > > > Resin ? will it adhere on aluminium? > > > (Copperhead, I believe that the AT did see some action when the Soviets > were > > > panicking against the Germans. They recruited - converted all kind of > extant > > > vehicles and mounted all kinds of guns on them . Have not seen yet a > Renault > > > type FT17 with Katyusha racks fixed on it, but an unkown photo might > show up > > > at some point). > > > Chrys > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You are currently subscribed to the "R/C Tank Combat" group. To post a message, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe, send email to [email protected] Visit the group at http://groups.google.com/group/rctankcombat -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
