240/320 wet/drywhat grit do you suggest
240/320 wet/drywhat grit do you suggest
Acrylics, I can not find denatured alcohol. can I use isopropal alcohol 99.9% to clean the joints before glueing? Thanks
nope, do 'em all at onceI have a question about gluing in a bubble trap. Begging pardon if this has been asked in the past.
Seems I've come across people saying gluing order is ends and baffles to the front, flip everything over and then glue those to the back. If you have a 3 baffle bubble trap how do you glue in the middle baffle after you flip it? Do you just install the last one after the first two are set?
I'd have one cast. Not going to be cheap, but thats what I'd do if I really wanted a cone. You might be able to heat form a tube for a cone thats not extremly tapered, but that sounds like a great way to turn expensive tubinging into expensive junk.(i'm sure it could be done, but how many mistakes can you aford?)
As far to getting it flat, a table saw with a jig fallowed up by some hand work.
James or anyone - If you were to buy a router table for general home woodworking and the odd acrylic work, what would it be? Kreg? Bench Dog? Incra? Bosch? Build your own?
There are a number of ways; blow molding into a female form, vacuum forming onto a male form, laminate a bunch of pieces together and stick the whole thing on a lathe, etc., or..just buy one from the states? there are a few companies that sell themif you were to make a cone, how would you do it?
and then how would you get the "edges" flat afterwards so you get the height that you want? gluing surface? how to make a seamless cone? =P
1/2" will be plentygoing to biuld tank that is 52x32x12 high was going to go rimless and use 1" thick for the sides how thick should the bottom be?
IMO building your own is the only way. I have yet to see a commercially available router table worth the effort of bringing it home, esp for our purposes.James or anyone - If you were to buy a router table for general home woodworking and the odd acrylic work, what would it be? Kreg? Bench Dog? Incra? Bosch? Build your own?
we only glue on the horizontal plane. check this thread for a brief tutorial: http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=390652Technical questions:
After clamping and squaring the pieces, then pinning, before glueing, what is the correct way to apply the solvent? I have the solvent (WO 3, 4, and 16 and various app.bottles/needles). Putting down the solvent for the "bottom/horizontal" piece is self explanatory, but how do you get solvent on the upper/vertical piece? Or is the void that is pinned small enough to attract it to the upper piece via capillary action?
if done properly, there should be little to no ooze, and never wipe it upThe glue that oozes out of the joint on the inside of the tank...I'm guessing it needs to be wiped up right away? Does it leave a blemish if it isnt wiped? Well, how can you wipe it off if the clamp is in the way?
a helper is nice, have him/her follow you around pulling wires/pins. One helper is all that's necessary. I do 6 x 10' tanks made from 2.5" acrylic with just a single helper.. it's doable, the trick is learning how to control the solvent flow with the applicator bottles. When you get this part down, you can use larger needles without spilling - makes things go a lot fasterAlso, how do you go about running the solvent around a 6x2 footprint? Thats 16' of joint, and recommended time is 10-30 seconds soak before removing pins. Is multiple applicators/helpers mandatory?
if the pieces are square and sit flat, almost no weight. If you have to use a lot of weight, then you most likely have a squareness issue and weight won't help that.Lastly, how much weight should be applied to the joint?
There are a number of ways; blow molding into a female form, vacuum forming onto a male form, laminate a bunch of pieces together and stick the whole thing on a lathe, etc., or..just buy one from the states? there are a few companies that sell them
James