Rubbermaid glue report: Forget Gorilla Glue
On Mon, 28 May 2007 14:49:40 -0500, Pondmeister
wrote:
baaaaaaaaaaahahahahahahahaa what a ****ng dumbass canuck........There
is a very smpl;e cure for making it stck about 90% better than it
normally owuld.....Shows exactly what a buynch of dumbasses patronize
and rule that moderated pond group. Try some of Jans PAP smear or
Gills UK **** pack.........or maybe some f Galens creme de la one eyed
snake...or erhaps some of Dereks dick cheese....
****ing loser stumped by such a simple situation!Hey maybe Ron the
preacher man can say a prayer for you to make it stick like snot on a
brass door know or cum on his upper lip from when he does Galen
Yeah I noticed that as well. Why aren't these retards just using
bulkheads or a wax toilet ring? Who the hell tries to glue a
rubbermaid anyway?
LMAO, hot glue???
On Mon, 28 May 2007 14:16:18 CST, "Gareee©"
wrote:
"Phyllis and Jim" wrote in message
legroups.com...
The compression would have to be steadily compressed once it is
hardened. It won't bond to the plastic. That is why we went for EDPM
and a tar-like sealer. It can stretch if there is any flex in the
can. Steady pressure on the silicone would work as well, as long as
it did not get moved.
So aquarium glue will not bond to the rubbermaid then?
The fitting won't be moved much, but the Rubbermaid does stretch with the
water weight, and since it is a fitting to an external line, I'm sure there
will be some simple occasional stress from cleaning the pond, hooking things
up, and detaching them, and storing the uv filter for winter.
I could use shoo goo (by the Goop people, and put a very generous amount on
both the interior and exterior. another thought, was to put it first on the
pvc pipe itself, so there's already a rubber "gasket" around it, and then
use it ac I described above.. I'd think the goop then would bond well to
itself.
Still considering options before pulling the filler out, and redoing that.
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I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know!
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