¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI was going to switch to t3 because I thought it produced a harder glue line (higher solids) which is preferable for commercial veneer, even though I have not had issues with t2 for 25ish years. These are the glues that i just happen to have on hand.I did a little non scientific experiment and found that? t2 is super soft/ pliable (no surprise) ?48% solids 10-15 min open T3 is much more stiff but still bendy 52% solids 20-25 min open T2 extend little bit bendy but snaps 49% solids 20-25 min open So looks like my search for one glue does it all is over. Regular ol¡¯ titebond is more than adequate for indoor furniture but would like more open time so will probably go with t3 for the open time and i think the color blends better with most woods, one thing I don¡¯t like is that its runny. For commercial veneer probably stick with t2 extend until its gone then maybe try some of the so called specially formulated PVA¡¯s for veneer like unibond1. For shop sawn idk, I did a bit in the past but only when there was a frame surrounding the panel so I don¡¯t know if they creeped, the joints never opened as far as I know. I don¡¯t really want to use a urea or epoxy.? Also probably obvious but definitely need to mix pva if it sits for awhile (not sure how long). I wasn¡¯t thinking and just grabbed the t3 and t2 extend and the first ones i poured behaved differently, the t2 extend didn¡¯t break at all which i thought was weird so i shook them and re-did it. Here¡¯s a pic and a vid¡ Regards, Mark On Feb 11, 2022, at 8:15 AM, imranindiana <imranindiana@...> wrote:
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