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On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 13:35:55 +0200, GeoffC wrote:
dazed and confuzzed wrote: Aluminum is like silver. It oxidizes almost instantaneously. It is this thin layer that fails when gluing parts. The adhesive bonds to the oxide layer and the oxide fails, not the glue. I wonder how the Lotus Elise stays together then? It has an aluminium tub-chassis, constructed from aluminium extrusions bonded together with epoxy resin. It's not that you can't epoxy aluminum. Of course you can. You just have to do good surface preparation first. There are products designed for this. Someone mentioned an etch sold by West Systems or something like that. I think there is something called Marine Tex that bonds well to aluminum. But in the OP's case, I would just use JB-weld to stick the piece back in, then put a single layer of fiberglass/epoxy over the outside of the broken piece, then paint. I would sand the area in the immediate vicinity of the break down to bare metal and clean with acetone or alcohol prior to applying the epoxy. Surface preparation is EVERYTHING in bonding applications. --Mac |