edgeau wrote:Glue and screw is the refrain. Everywhere I glue and screw. Not sure? Glue and screw...
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greenchicken wrote:In one of the first How To I read they wrote this.
Polyurethane glue is going to be an important part of the trailer construction. It fills gaps, is not brittle (like yellow wood glue) and is extremely binding and strong..... roof and bed will be bonded together with this polyurethane glue, in essence creating a monocoque. In addition, the teardrop shape of the roof line increases the strength over a square box because forces are transferred around the curves down to the base
Basically we are talk gin about Gorilla Glue. OK... fine with me, I use this all the time.
Any comments about using screw or lag bolt to hold the wall to the cross beams.
And when it come to the roof can I use a my pneumatic stable gun... since the glue will hold it down and fiber glass will be going over everything?
My plan is epoxy and screw the joist and epoxy and brad nail the roof ply.
swoody126 wrote:the ubiquitous "they" say that a good glue joint will be stronger than the wood on either side of the joint
when building boats w/ epoxy a common practice is to use screws to hold the parts in place while the pox cures and then remove the screws filling the holes w/ thickened pox WHICH has proven over time to hold parts together permanently
personally i leave screws in pace when using anything other than epoxy for bonding
the above personal comment(s) relate to building with the stick framing process
when doing stitch n glue or stitch n tape builds all the metalic or plastic mechanical fasteners are removed prior to finishing because epoxy is the bonding agent and it is proven to work
over the last 3 years i have been involved with boat builds where the boats became the property/toys of teenagers who "put them thru their paces"
some were total epoxy builds(screws removed)
one was a total TiteBond III build(screws left in)
one was a total PL-Premium 3x build(screws left in)
and several were built w/ a combination of TiteBond III and epoxy(all screws removed)
though one of the boats was lost in a little wind storm the rest of them are all still in service across the southern US
over the years i have also been involved in boat builds where all parts were bonded with epoxy and stapled in place while the pox cured and then simply left in place because it would have been a stinker to remove them not because they were needed for strength
new products are surfacing all the time and IMHO putting them to the "acid test" by turning the built items over to teen agers fills that bill
btw, i was a junior high shop teacher in my last life and am still involved in youth workshops where small boats are the kid's quest...
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