I'm looking for a place in Austria. The price isn't too expensive on the
Loctite. But the shipping from Rapid is 2x the price of the glue, which
makes it prohibitive. The shipping from r-g which is not in Austria is 10
euro which still isn't good.
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On Sat, 4 May 2019, 04:27 stefan_trethan <stefan_trethan@... wrote:
You don't want to buy the good stuff anyway, like Loctite 9492, you'll say
it's too expensive.
R&G has decent regular temperature epoxy:
And remember: The bigger the gob the better the job.
ST
On Sat, May 4, 2019 at 1:33 AM cheater cheater <cheater00@...>
wrote:
Does anyone know a good place in Austria to get high temperature epoxy
for gluing down lifted traces? I would appreciate that. A product
available on German Amazon would be good too.
Thanks
On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 11:01 PM Szabolcs Szigeti
<szigiszabolcs@...> wrote:
Hi,
You can use heat-cure epoxy such as this one:
.
You need to bake the board for the epoxy to cure.
I would never use CA, that makes tear-gas like horrible fumes when
heated
during soldering.
Szabolcs
cheater cheater <cheater00@...> ezt ¨ªrta (id?pont: 2019. m¨¢j.
3.,
P,
16:21):
Thanks for the ideas.
Tge trackbis just lifted, there is no break. It's flexible, held
together
by the conformal coating, and there's continuity. So, I want to glue
it
down. I don't think it would be possible to get epoxy under there,
as I
don't think it will wick. However CA glue will. What do you think of
that?
On Fri, 3 May 2019, 15:56 Brendan via Groups.Io
<the_infinite_penguin=
[email protected] wrote:
On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 06:29 AM, cheater cheater wrote:
I have a piece of equipment where a trace was lifted. The part is
still
attached and I would like to glue it down. The part is a socket
for a
cable, and the plug is difficult to insert and remove. I will
have
to
solder the other pin which is the ground plane, and broke off, so
the
glue
has to survive that. I'll also need to add some structural solder
on
the
sides. Is cyanoacrylate a good idea here? Anything better than
that?
Thanks.
This is what I use. It is actually a pcb over coat epoxy but it
seems to
stand up well to heat.