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Made in se
Dakka Veteran





Sweden

Hey there!

I recently bought a box of Scourges. So I glued on the wings on the first guy which were both the feathered version. To my dismay I now noticed that they were two different types of feathered ones and I managed to glue two different types on the same guy. Now I wonder how the hell I am to get this super glue of so I can replace the wing. I tried pulling it of but I am pretty sure it will break. Any suggestions?

Thanks for the assistance!

An open mind is like a fortress with its gates unbarred and unguarded.  
   
Made in gb
Regular Dakkanaut




I've heard that shoving the model in the freezer for a few hours makes the glue brittle and easier to snap, although I haven't yet tested this theory. In the past I've just used a knife to chisel bits apart but I suppose it depends on how much glue you need to get though!
   
Made in se
Dakka Veteran





Sweden

I'll try it out! Thanks allot!

An open mind is like a fortress with its gates unbarred and unguarded.  
   
Made in us
Implacable Black Templar Initiate




Palm Beach Gardens, FL

If you can buy dawn power dissolver or a similar product (used for cleaning pans) you can soak the model and the super glue comes apart (brittle and easy to remove). It also works great to remove paint. Here's a thread that mentions it : http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/449574.page

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2014/01/12 14:27:56


 
   
Made in se
Dakka Veteran





Sweden

Thank you for the advice!

An open mind is like a fortress with its gates unbarred and unguarded.  
   
Made in us
Boosting Ultramarine Biker




Illinois, USA

peebs wrote:
I've heard that shoving the model in the freezer for a few hours makes the glue brittle and easier to snap, although I haven't yet tested this theory. In the past I've just used a knife to chisel bits apart but I suppose it depends on how much glue you need to get though!


I actually just tried this yesterday for the first time. I'd mangled a storm bolter on one of my GK Paladins attempting to drill out the barrels after assembly. Like you, I've been successful in the past using an x-acto blade, but this time it wouldn't budge. I put it in the freezer for about 3 hours, put the tip of the knife under and gave it a little twist. The storm bolter went flying across the room. Cool.
   
Made in gb
Blood-Raging Khorne Berserker




Fife, Scotland

Freezer trick definitely works. Just remember and tell your other half/parents your models are in there.

   
Made in se
Dakka Veteran





Sweden

Can confirm that the freezer worked for me aswell, after 24 hours in the freezer the wing went right of, no damage =) Thanks for the advice!

An open mind is like a fortress with its gates unbarred and unguarded.  
   
Made in us
Rampaging Furioso Blood Angel Dreadnought





Boston, MA

My experience - glue that you want to remove - cannot be removed.

Glue that you want to 'hold' will invariably not hold... Hah sorry I don't have any good advice.

Please check out my photo blog: http://atticwars40k.blogspot.com/ 
   
Made in gb
Yellin' Yoof




northolt

thats a cool little trick to know

ultramarines 3rd company  
   
Made in gb
Regular Dakkanaut





London

Im surprised freezing Finecast would work, it assume it would make it very brittle.
   
Made in us
Abhorrent Grotesque Aberration





The super glue, by nature, is extremely brittle to begin with. Age usually does it in, but so does jarring it and extreme temperature changes.

More so than with finecast. Finecast tends to be more elastic, which is actually one of the main problems I have with it. It doesn't take very much heat before it starts bending... as in a typical Texas summer is all you need.

That said, when gluing plastic to plastic you really should be using one of the plastic cement glues, like this stuff: http://www.testors.com/product/136942/8872C/_/Liquid_Cement_For_Plastic

I've never seen a joint fail when applied correctly with that. A few drops to cover the points that meet and a bit of pressure for about 30 seconds (or a minute depending on part size) is all it takes. It actually melts the parts and they join together as it "dries".

CA/superglue/etc try to keep the joints together by wicking into the materials. Plastic and Metal isn't porous (or, rather, the pores they have are very very tiny) so it never really gets a good hold unless you score the areas you are gluing... and even then it's just ok.


------------------
"Why me?" Gideon begged, falling to his knees.
"Why not?" - Asdrubael Vect 
   
 
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