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how long to cure liner splice?
I'm about to splice 2 liners together - my old one and a new addition - but
I'm wondering how long the silicone, tape and liner prep should cure before allowing the fish's water to touch it. Ideas? |
how long to cure liner splice?
"Mike Miller" wrote in message news:6XfQc.205814$a24.63140@attbi_s03... I'm about to splice 2 liners together - my old one and a new addition - but I'm wondering how long the silicone, tape and liner prep should cure before allowing the fish's water to touch it. Ideas? At least as long the manufacturer recommends. I let my stream run before the 24 hours that the seam tape manufacturer recommended. I have a leak to this day. BV. |
how long to cure liner splice?
I bought the parts separate, not as a kit, and it doesn't say. I was
thinking more about the health of my fish, but you have a good point. "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... "Mike Miller" wrote in message news:6XfQc.205814$a24.63140@attbi_s03... I'm about to splice 2 liners together - my old one and a new addition - but I'm wondering how long the silicone, tape and liner prep should cure before allowing the fish's water to touch it. Ideas? At least as long the manufacturer recommends. I let my stream run before the 24 hours that the seam tape manufacturer recommended. I have a leak to this day. BV. |
how long to cure liner splice?
I'm about to splice 2 liners together - my old one and a new addition - but I'm wondering how long the silicone, tape and liner prep should cure before allowing the fish's water to touch it. Ideas? At least as long the manufacturer recommends. I let my stream run before the 24 hours that the seam tape manufacturer recommended. I have a leak to this day. BV. Now you tell me! I just finished reseaming the liner from my little veggie filter to the stream. Only let it cure... oh, maybe five minutes the first time. This time I gave it three hours, then covered the seam with another layer of adhesive with a strip of liner on top of that, then taped it all down with black plastic tape. So far, no noticeable leaks -- except where the stream overflowed on the sides and that is fixed. Of course, it's only been 36 hours . . . Gabrielle, wishing she'd really read the directions |
how long to cure liner splice?
"Gabrielle" wrote in message
... BV SAID: At least as long the manufacturer recommends. I let my stream run before the 24 hours that the seam tape manufacturer recommended. I have a leak to this day. Now you tell me! I just finished reseaming the liner from my little veggie filter to the stream. Only let it cure... oh, maybe five minutes the first time. This time I gave it three hours, then covered the seam with another layer of adhesive with a strip of liner on top of that, then taped it all down with black plastic tape. So far, no noticeable leaks -- except where the stream overflowed on the sides and that is fixed. Of course, it's only been 36 hours . . . Question: what are you using for an adhesive? Is this a glue or seam sealing tape? Most silicone rubber in a tube is a sealer and glues things together more by coincidence that design. Also, all the protection you provide prevents evaporation of the solvents in other materials and inhibits cure. Silicones expect some moisture from the air to cure fully, too. Tape adhesives just need some time to lock onto the substrate roughness. -- Crashj |
how long to cure liner splice?
Now you tell me! I just finished reseaming the liner from my little veggie filter to the stream. Only let it cure... oh, maybe five minutes the first time. This time I gave it three hours, then covered the seam with another layer of adhesive with a strip of liner on top of that, then taped it all down with black plastic tape. So far, no noticeable leaks -- except where the stream overflowed on the sides and that is fixed. Of course, it's only been 36 hours . . . Question: what are you using for an adhesive? Is this a glue or seam sealing tape? Most silicone rubber in a tube is a sealer and glues things together more by coincidence that design. Also, all the protection you provide prevents evaporation of the solvents in other materials and inhibits cure. Silicones expect some moisture from the air to cure fully, too. Tape adhesives just need some time to lock onto the substrate roughness. It's a tape adhesive -- the kind you peel the backing off of. Considering it was 110F and rather dry here in the desert, maybe the three hours it got was enough. I'll just have to hope. If it wasn't and it starts to leak, I'll just have to do it over and do it right. I have now read the directions thoroughly. |
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