I have used Goo on everything for many years. As you say use it as contact 
cement. That is the key. Even though the solvents have evaporated an instant 
bond occurs. 
I have bonded styrene to plexiglas (cast, not extruded). Never a hitch unless I 
got in a hurry.

I detest Elmers. the worst glue ever made and the one I had my greatest 
problems with.  Anything Bordens produced, including ice cream,  is crap.
We all have our dislikes            John Armstrong
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Pieter Roos 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, April 29, 2011 3:05 PM
  Subject: RE: {S-Scale List} Dissolving Goo


    
  The first problem is that many users don't follow the directions, and use the 
Goo as glue, not a contact adhesive. Using it as described should allow a 
majority of the solvent to evaporate before the parts are placed together.

  That said, I tend to avoid Goo when plastics are involved. Elmers made a 
water soluble contact adhesive that I preferred, but I have not seen it in a 
while.

  Pieter E. Roos

  --- On Fri, 4/29/11, JGG KahnSr <[email protected]> wrote:

  > From: JGG KahnSr <[email protected]>
  > Subject: RE: {S-Scale List} Dissolving Goo
  > To: [email protected]
  > Date: Friday, April 29, 2011, 1:48 PM
  > 
  > My chemical expertise didn't continue past high school
  > (although I should have taken chemistry in college instead
  > of physics for my lab science, but 
  > eighteen year olds can't be told anything--they know it all
  > already), but that makes sense, as if acetone is a solvent
  > for Goo, the agent that evaporates
  > from Goo is chemically similar if not identical.  Most
  > of the AM freight cars I bought from the Hoquat estate sale
  > had the sheet steel weight Gooed to
  > the floor, generously-applied, and each had warped
  > accordingly.  I had to pry them apart (no acetone on
  > styrene!), scrape it all off, reshape the floors
  > and re-Goo--very sparingly--while clamping the floor and
  > weight together.  So far it seems to have worked.
  > Jace Kahn 
  > General Manager 
  > Ceres & Canisteo RR Co./Champlain County Traction Co. 
  > 
  > 
  > > > IIRC, Acetone should be what you want, though it
  > will
  > > adversely affect  some plastics. 
  > 
  > > As, over time, will Goo- 
  > > I've learned from experience.  Pliobond seems to
  > be somewhat less
  > > destructive, though I'd be cautious with either.
  > > Stan Stokrocki



  

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