If possible, I would highly recommend getting someone with experience to show you a little bit. Routers are very efficient at remove flesh from humans so IMO getting some hands-on training, even if informal, will be beneficial. Whether left-to-right or right-to-left depends on what you are doing IME, there are times when it's very beneficial to do things one way over the other
As a standard though, I stand feeding the work forward with the router on the right side of the work. But many people have different ways and can achieve good results with whatever way they're most comfortable.
Look in my gallery, should be some pics in there showing one of my router set-ups.
As for gluing, I always glue from the outside, that solvent bottle never sees the inside of a display tank - one drop inside a display area and I'm starting over. Gluing baffles into a sump is different, not nearly as critical and you have no choice but to glue from the inside
HTH,
James
it could be cheap material....the only time i really see one side white and one side brown paper is the frosted or textured material....they might have peeled one side and then masked it back off with transfer tape it is a white paper that i use all the time for masking...
i would say let your joint soak for like 20 seconds longer before pulling the pins and see if it still does that...if the joint didnt soak long enough and you pull the pins you don't get the little damn of material around the seam to keep the air out...
IIRC Noxtat is a static dissipative hard-coat. The coating needs to be removed if you are going to glue to it. Other than that - cannot be glued.It turns out that the material I have is Noxtat. I believe it is cross linked acrylic and so I'm not sure what solvent to use to glue this stuff together.
I'd use #4 or similar. You should not need much in the way of clamps, maybe just a little weight. I am concerned that a joint split though, never a good sign. Is this a home built sump? got any pics?My sump split at a vertical seam..Its 3/8--48x24x18 can I use WO#4 to put it back together or is there a better way/product? Also do I clamp it or just weighted pressure?
Thanks