Glue for abs

Author
Discussion

chriz1

Original Poster:

661 posts

215 months

Saturday 9th August 2014
quotequote all
Need to strengthen this



Headlight fixing tab that's starting to come away from the headlight what's best glue to use to strengthen this tab I think it's ABS plastic ?

Thanks chris

OldBuoy

27,019 posts

183 months

Saturday 9th August 2014
quotequote all
I tend to use Araldite for plastics that I want to stay stuck. Not the rapid the 24hr stuff, it helps if you can gently clamp it if not tape it while it cures.

chriz1

Original Poster:

661 posts

215 months

Saturday 9th August 2014
quotequote all
Which one do you use? As I was under the impression it doesn't work to bond plastics?

OldBuoy

27,019 posts

183 months

Saturday 9th August 2014
quotequote all
I use Araldite Std. Just read the packet, it bonds most plastics except polyethylene, polypopylene and teflon. Just fixed some awkward seat trim that is under tension seems to work fine.

chriz1

Original Poster:

661 posts

215 months

Saturday 9th August 2014
quotequote all
Cool will take a look

V10Mike

586 posts

206 months

Monday 11th August 2014
quotequote all
You want a solvent cement. MEK (methyl ethyl ketone) will do it (if you can find any), or if you need gap-filling use a solvent cement for plastic plumbing.

chriz1

Original Poster:

661 posts

215 months

Monday 11th August 2014
quotequote all
Yes tried solvent cement didn't help, just peeled right off when dry, so going to drop it off to local body shop to have it plastic welded proper

trench

33 posts

126 months

Monday 11th August 2014
quotequote all
Q bond with the reinforcing powder is th stuff you need.


348jeff

125 posts

127 months

Wednesday 13th August 2014
quotequote all
Used Bondloc B3294 a few times to glue "hard plastics" where superglue etc had previously failed. Excellent stuff and ideal for what you want to do. I glued a broken headlight tab on my car a couple of years ago and its still holding just fine.

On offer too!

http://www.maplin.co.uk/p/bondloc-plastic-weld-28m...

unstable load

28 posts

119 months

Wednesday 13th August 2014
quotequote all
Q Bond and powder is good, but if you have time and an old part or a piece of ABS, then chop it into small bits and stick it in a glass jar with some Toluene and let it dissolve. Once dissolved then paint it over the cracks and let it set. If you have some material you can also make gussets or brace parts and stick them with the goo you mixed up. It will bend and form easily if you use a heat gun on it so you can make patches to any shape.
It takes time to dissolve the pieces and also for it to fully set, but it works well as a cement.

V10Mike

586 posts

206 months

Thursday 14th August 2014
quotequote all
chriz1 said:
Yes tried solvent cement didn't help, just peeled right off when dry, so going to drop it off to local body shop to have it plastic welded proper
If MEK didn't dissolve it, it's not ABS.

SRT8GC

86 posts

116 months

Monday 18th August 2014
quotequote all
V10Mike said:
You want a solvent cement. MEK (methyl ethyl ketone) will do it (if you can find any), or if you need gap-filling use a solvent cement for plastic plumbing.
MEK is a cleaner not a solvent cement

SRT8GC

86 posts

116 months

Monday 18th August 2014
quotequote all
You can weld ABS with ABS weld rod and a hot air gun

That's how they repair cracked bumpers

You can also make the join you have stronger by carefully melting at the join with a soldering iron, to force some hot material into the join while holding in place

Cools and hardens in seconds

Edited by SRT8GC on Monday 18th August 18:48

dave_s13

13,814 posts

269 months

Monday 18th August 2014
quotequote all
I've tried 3 different glues to try and fix my fridge internal door shelf... Can't find anything that bloody works!

SRT8GC

86 posts

116 months

Monday 18th August 2014
quotequote all
dave_s13 said:
I've tried 3 different glues to try and fix my fridge internal door shelf... Can't find anything that bloody works!
If it's clear and plastic it's either Perspex or polycarbonate

Again heat will bond maybe try the soldering iron trick if it just cracked

Might not be pretty

GadgeS3C

4,516 posts

164 months

Friday 29th August 2014
quotequote all
SRT8GC said:
If it's clear and plastic it's either Perspex or polycarbonate

Again heat will bond maybe try the soldering iron trick if it just cracked

Might not be pretty
Could also be SAN or MABS. Quite a few other transparent polymers these days.

Agree on the soldering iron though!