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Glenn Ashmore wrote in message news:E0Slb.90613$sp2.84885@lakeread04...
If you mean that melamine coated masonite, forget it. OK for short term exposure in a shower surround but constantly soaked in a tank the water will get through and turn the backing to mush. You may find some solid plastic stuff a few racks down the aisle at the Home Despot that will not absorb water. It is usually stuck to walls with Liquid nails or other construction adhesive but I have not found an adheasive that will stick to it reliably in a joint. Thanks, that's what I thought. I found this: http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=41592 but I am a little confused. Do you feed some type of volitile gas, or does it just shoot electrically heated forced air? Scotty If you can build the tank outside and install it a laid up polyester or epoxy FRP tank with a glued on lid would work. If you have access to an air compressor and want to learn something new for a little less money you can get a 4x8 sheet of 1/4" HDPE from a plastics distributor for about $65 and a plastic welder from Harbor freight for another $25. With a little practice on some scrap you can make a really nice tank almost any shape you want. (Curves are not easy though) Backyard Renegade wrote: Hey folks, Scotty here. What I am planning is some custom water tanks and such to be made to fit inbetween two bulkheads. They will hold water for washing hands and such, not necessarily drinking water. Any suggestions as to what material and what adhesive/connectors to use to keep it watertight? I was thinking some of that bathroom wall material they sell at Home Depot, but would I use some kind of silicone, pvc cement, or would I have to weld it, and if so, how? Thanks for the input, Scotty |
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Backyard Renegade wrote: Thanks, that's what I thought. I found this: http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=41592 but I am a little confused. Do you feed some type of volitile gas, or does it just shoot electrically heated forced air? Scotty That's it. Price must have gone up sense I got mine. You hook it up to an air supply and an element in the gun heats it to about 350F. It doesn't take much air. With some practice you can get a pretty decent weld. Especially for the price. Just be sure the material is very clean and use the proper rod. It has to be the same plastic as the base material. Clamp everything really well because you have to press the filler rod pretty hard to get it to blend with the joint and don't try to fill the joint in one pass. Make 3 or 4 passes to slightly overfill the seam and then trim off the excess. Two things I don't like about it. It has no temperature control so you have to fiddle with the air flow to get the right heat and it doesn't come with any tips. I would love a speed tip that holds the rod in the right position so you get more even beads but as little as I use it I don't want to pay $250 for a better model. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
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