Great video. There are so many substances that bonds well with CA glue. But we need a comparison test in different situations to see the real strength of these concoctions.
Baking soda is a popular substance, and its strength is abysmal. I wouldn't use the combination for anything but purely cosmetic repairs that have zero stresses on them. I'm skeptical of this concrete solution.
It depends on technique. If you want maximum strength you need to make many layers. You need to apply CA and bristle with soda and again apply CA, and you need to wait all the time till the CA hardens naturally layer by layer. The material will be translucent . If you pour CA quickly and use tablespoons of baking soda it gonna be a porous substance, and its gonna be opaque. @@imacmill
I used superglue to close a deep cut in my finger. (Cut to the bone) It worked perfetly. (In Vietnam they did the same to help the soldiers) Put it on... and after a few days... it came of. I put some extra glue on it. And it healed perfetly. Almost no scar.
Yes, I always do the same when cutting myself by accident. Another upside is: you can wash your hands or shower without always having to replace a band-aid.
@imacmill Bro, there is a scale for both hardness and toughness. In simple terms, hardness is an offensive ability, the hardest is a diamond and used to cut through things. However toughness is the defensive durability, which things like diamond lack. Metal has more toughness. Diamond is added to metal to make it cut better. Food for thought, water isn't hard but it sure is tough. In engineering, you'll need to know: toughness is the ability of material to resist cracking or breaking under stress. And engineering websites talk about it.
Call me a geek, but this lesson made my toes curl! This new ingredient in your arsenal is an amazing leap--you're a freakin' alchemist! I've been having great results fixing all manner of things with a matrix of superglue + baking soda, graphite, string, or cotton...but whoa, cement brings monumental possibilities. And it's great to show the modeling clay mold hack again--that knowledge helped me fabricate a broken screw tab on my Toyota's window control unit instead of waiting for a replacement part, and it was damned satisfying.
We need a comparison video between - super glue + baking soda VS - super glue + baking soda and graphite mixture VS - super glue + cement! Who's curious about which one is the strongest and wich one is the weekest?
You know the bit near the end of the video where he/she repairs a crack in a thin piece of (what looks like) ABS plastic? If you use SG and baking soda, that repair will last 0.05 seconds if you even slightly bend the plastic. Baking soda with SG should be used for cosmetic repairs only. Concrete may be better, but I'm skeptical of how much.
We have been using this method in the automotive industry for years. For plastic elements, instead of putty 😊 Autóiparban évek óta ezt a módszert használjuk. műanyag elemekhez, gitt helyett.😊
So this is impressive but I'd be curious how it compares to the typical powders such as baking soda and graphite dust. Mostly because I LOATHE concrete dust.
Interesting idea, but there's a huge difference in the coefficient of thermal expansion between the plastic and the filler. With reasonable thermal cycling, like in a car, I'd expect early failure. Have you tested these conditions?
These examples are only for cosmetic repairs. you are better served using a pure superglue or even better epoxy for applications that involves significant stress.
Basically super glue will harden any powder like including your favorite instant noodles pack. Using cement + super glue is a bit over kill, since the cement + any liquid are already act as glue itself, the hardness is no doubt, but will it survive the test of time? I tried many method but they eventually wear out and crack itself or other part because it were too hard.
Will it repair small tears in vinyl automobile seat upholstery do you think, because sitting in the seat will put stress on the repair every time someone gets in and out of the car. Have you tried it on upholstery and vinyl seat coverings yet?
I kind of doubt it will work on something as flexible and stretchy as vinyl. I would try another piece of vinyl glued to the backside of the tear with something like 3M upholstery glue. I’ve done this sort of repair before, several times, with good results.
Silicone adhesive spread thin to fill in cracks in leather and vinyl appears to work. Mix the silicone with oil-based paint. Once cured you can then paint over the repair with paint specific to leather/vinyl coloring and it will stick. If you don't mix paint into the silicone prior to application the paint won't stick as well.
And people have been using epoxy fillers for a long time. The longer work time means you can dial in the right consistency you want, from peanut butter-like consistency to ketchup-like consistency.
@@Cortesevasive its also has poor solvent and temperature resistance, brittleness. CA will never hit 4400 psi tensile strength... Shrug, pends on the job...
With the right glue for the right job, you can surprise yourself! Eg, my 5-a-side trainers' soles were splitting, I needed one more match out of them, so I used wood glue and put several applications of it on, allowed to dry for 48hrs total. Played the following evening, wondering how they'd get on. ... they lasted THREE matches!!! Bought new trainers after that.
I think just about any of the “instant”. Or “krazy glue”, or “super glue” type glues would work. I’m more interested in what type of cement to use…. Maybe a “thin-set” type? Obviously, you don’t want sand or rocks in it….
I second the request many here have made to compare the different materials you used so far (and perhaps others) for these fixes. Which one works best? Are they equally strong, equally resistant to heat/cold, etc.? Ash is perhaps least good due to worse availability; baking soda and cement are both cheap and easily available;
After watching this I canceled my family's dental insurance and bought a sack of cement and a bottle of superglue. Thanks, RUclips!
Try baking soda and superglue? they're white😂
In my village all the old folk now demanding steaks and solid foods, but this too expensive so we stop selling ca glue to them.
@@cawi17 White cement is also there🤣
lol
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
That taking a mold of the clip and then placing the broken part into the mold to rebuild it was genius.
@@AiresLA۵۶۶۵۷۵۵۵۵۶۶۵۶۶۵۶۵۵😂😊
@@AiresLAYour cremated grandma will serve good for years to come!
Thank you, Glad you found it useful!
Yes, that was outside of the box thinking right there.
Timestamp?
Thanks a lot! Now I'm looking for stuff around my house to break just so I can try this out!
😂😂
🤣🤣🤣
My thought exactly
Amazing ! This method is so great, but I didn't realize it for a long time. Thank you for sharing. Wishing you lots of luck and success. ❤
Great video. There are so many substances that bonds well with CA glue. But we need a comparison test in different situations to see the real strength of these concoctions.
Another video right there
Baking soda is a popular substance, and its strength is abysmal. I wouldn't use the combination for anything but purely cosmetic repairs that have zero stresses on them.
I'm skeptical of this concrete solution.
It depends on technique. If you want maximum strength you need to make many layers. You need to apply CA and bristle with soda and again apply CA, and you need to wait all the time till the CA hardens naturally layer by layer. The material will be translucent .
If you pour CA quickly and use tablespoons of baking soda it gonna be a porous substance, and its gonna be opaque.
@@imacmill
@@Cortesevasive It will still be extremely brittle. If you bend it, even slightly, it will fail.
Well it isn't flexy material it doesn't bend. Its very hard but it depends on thickness, if you build 3mm+ its unbreakable.@@imacmill
Legend has it, he is still super gluing stuff together to this day.
Love all your hacks. Very smart and time efficient. Never knew a lot of these until now.Thank you very much !
I used superglue to close a deep cut in my finger.
(Cut to the bone)
It worked perfetly.
(In Vietnam they did the same to help the soldiers)
Put it on...
and after a few days...
it came of.
I put some extra glue on it.
And it healed perfetly. Almost no scar.
Yes, I always do the same when cutting myself by accident. Another upside is: you can wash your hands or shower without always having to replace a band-aid.
You forgot the cement
@@Still_Fortnut😂😂
Its crazy how they react together ( superglue n our blood ) that foaming thing before it hardest in seconds
I've heard of the baking soda trick and I've used it it works fantastic sets up instantly and it is rock hard
It isn't rock hard, it is a ROCK.
@@oscaremoralesp28It is brittle AF, and is worthless for anything other than cosmetic repairs.
@@imacmill
You always have understand the difference between hardness and toughness.
@@CurlyFromTheSwirly 'Toughness' isn't an engineering term. You need to understand that.
@imacmill
Bro, there is a scale for both hardness and toughness. In simple terms, hardness is an offensive ability, the hardest is a diamond and used to cut through things.
However toughness is the defensive durability, which things like diamond lack. Metal has more toughness. Diamond is added to metal to make it cut better.
Food for thought, water isn't hard but it sure is tough.
In engineering, you'll need to know:
toughness is the ability of material to resist cracking or breaking under stress. And engineering websites talk about it.
Most useful video I’ve seen in a while. Cheers.
I always appreciate your videos, thanks for uploading
My pleasure!
Discovered this on accident years ago. Yet never knew how strong it actually was or the many diverse ways on how to use it. Thanks.
I use sawdust some times.
I'm so glad there are insanely inventive people like this in the world!
Baking soda works well too 👍
That molding technique is freaking genius!!
Call me a geek, but this lesson made my toes curl! This new ingredient in your arsenal is an amazing leap--you're a freakin' alchemist! I've been having great results fixing all manner of things with a matrix of superglue + baking soda, graphite, string, or cotton...but whoa, cement brings monumental possibilities. And it's great to show the modeling clay mold hack again--that knowledge helped me fabricate a broken screw tab on my Toyota's window control unit instead of waiting for a replacement part, and it was damned satisfying.
Cement comes in 60-lb bags.
@@zyxw2000 As I imagine *you* have to do sometimes, lonely guy.
@@Susie_Flooziethat was just totally unnecessary 💀
At 1:21
Brilliant!👍
1:15 Wow, very impressive
Right! Ingenious idea!
good tips for life
Wuuuuuuuaaaaasoooooo genial que tipo de pegamento usaste ?
The reason baking soda is used so much is that you are more likely to have that in your kitchen cupboard than cement
We need a comparison video between
- super glue + baking soda
VS
- super glue + baking soda and graphite mixture
VS
- super glue + cement!
Who's curious about which one is the strongest and wich one is the weekest?
Интересно! Но мне кажется, что результат будет одинаковым.
I've only used super glue + baking soda, and it hasn't always been the best..never tried SG + Cement..it looks like it would be tops..
You know the bit near the end of the video where he/she repairs a crack in a thin piece of (what looks like) ABS plastic? If you use SG and baking soda, that repair will last 0.05 seconds if you even slightly bend the plastic. Baking soda with SG should be used for cosmetic repairs only. Concrete may be better, but I'm skeptical of how much.
ruclips.net/video/NM2XCugQxHc/видео.htmlsi=9xwbtEYytoAWO-iV
There's also super glue and iron powder. But yeah I'd love to see comparison videos. @@stanmarr4488
please compare the strength of the different stuff (eg. tension (being pulled apart), compression (being pushed together)...)
Brilliant idea thank you for sharing ❤
Unbeatable👍
Thank you ❤🙃
Is it possible to build a house with these two ingredients ?
We have been using this method in the automotive industry for years. For plastic elements, instead of putty 😊
Autóiparban évek óta ezt a módszert használjuk. műanyag elemekhez, gitt helyett.😊
Thanks for your comment I was looking for someone who actually tried it!
Köszi a hozzászólást, pont olyat kerestem aki már próbálta!
So this is impressive but I'd be curious how it compares to the typical powders such as baking soda and graphite dust. Mostly because I LOATHE concrete dust.
It would make your lungs have more 'concrete' foundations tho 😅
very nice. And I also have a few ideas
Can’t wait to try this
What tipe of cement please??? There are like 10 different types in the store. Same with glue...
Interesting idea, but there's a huge difference in the coefficient of thermal expansion between the plastic and the filler. With reasonable thermal cycling, like in a car, I'd expect early failure. Have you tested these conditions?
At 00:44 seconds
@@block9390 Are you sure about that timestamp?
These examples are only for cosmetic repairs. you are better served using a pure superglue or even better epoxy for applications that involves significant stress.
That’s pretty amazing 🤩
This is .. OMG remarkable! Thank you 👍🏼
amazing!
Basically super glue will harden any powder like including your favorite instant noodles pack. Using cement + super glue is a bit over kill, since the cement + any liquid are already act as glue itself, the hardness is no doubt, but will it survive the test of time? I tried many method but they eventually wear out and crack itself or other part because it were too hard.
I just broke my mother plastic so seeing this will help me fix it because I assured her I will fix it up. Thank you!
Will it repair small tears in vinyl automobile seat upholstery do you think, because sitting in the seat will put stress on the repair every time someone gets in and out of the car. Have you tried it on upholstery and vinyl seat coverings yet?
I kind of doubt it will work on something as flexible and stretchy as vinyl. I would try another piece of vinyl glued to the backside of the tear with something like 3M upholstery glue. I’ve done this sort of repair before, several times, with good results.
Silicone adhesive spread thin to fill in cracks in leather and vinyl appears to work. Mix the silicone with oil-based paint. Once cured you can then paint over the repair with paint specific to leather/vinyl coloring and it will stick. If you don't mix paint into the silicone prior to application the paint won't stick as well.
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing
I’m impressed 😃👏
hello! how are you?
Muy práctico para arreglar cosàs en el hogar
Hola que tal muchas bendiciones, tengo una pregunta , el polvo que usa que es
This is pure genius 👏
Outstanding tutorial👍🏻🤝
Thank you 👍
Thanks, great video! What brand of super glue and what brand of cement was used or works best?
Perfect 👌
very smart👍🍺
Spot on for repairs
What is the link for your Super Glue used on this video? I want to experiment with the same products? 🤓 ❤ 👍👍 👁
i need a stress test for this and baking soda to campare what's best
One must wholeheartedly support anything which adds to the virtue of sticktoitiveness!!
Is this stronger than super glue and baking soda or super glue and graphite powder?
So is this a stronger bond compared to your graphite and baking soda mixture?
Useful ideas.
Thanks your share...
Thanks. I have been using Q Bond. Same but expensive. What do you use to clean with after gluing in the video?
Thank you this will save me a lot of peso.. I'm subscribing
@Inventor 101, doesn't cotton and Super Glue give the same results?
Amazing Video! Very Useful!
Glad it was helpful!
So glad I checked this site out, my brain was racing like crazy.👍
Nice, but for most of those things you can simply use epoxy glue instead (it should also be less brittle). I guess CA dries faster, though.
And people have been using epoxy fillers for a long time. The longer work time means you can dial in the right consistency you want, from peanut butter-like consistency to ketchup-like consistency.
I use both epoxy and super glue and strength are similar when used correctly with super glue slightly cheaper and much faster
CA is dirt cheap dries quickly and is accessible
@@Cortesevasive its also has poor solvent and temperature resistance, brittleness. CA will never hit 4400 psi tensile strength... Shrug, pends on the job...
What material is used as a mold to cast, say a bolt head?
Play dough?
With the right glue for the right job, you can surprise yourself! Eg, my 5-a-side trainers' soles were splitting, I needed one more match out of them, so I used wood glue and put several applications of it on, allowed to dry for 48hrs total. Played the following evening, wondering how they'd get on. ... they lasted THREE matches!!! Bought new trainers after that.
What all of RUclips wants to know is whether you won the matches?
Is this the common school dough?
Mantap,keren
Does baking powder do the same or is this better?
Cracking trick all the same
👍👍👍😜🏴🦕🦄😁🤞✌️
Incredible, well done
Baking soda , cement, mortar, steel wool and fine sand , they all work well wi5h super glue
Super amazing and useful life hack video ever wretched
Can the methods be used for waterproof projects?
Trong video anh dùng keo gì vậy xin cảm ơn
I think just about any of the “instant”. Or “krazy glue”, or “super glue” type glues would work. I’m more interested in what type of cement to use…. Maybe a “thin-set” type? Obviously, you don’t want sand or rocks in it….
Awesome music.
Who and what track?
Outstanding!
Thanks for a cool video, can’t wait to give a try
❤️
Great info
WHAT kind of cement? red bag quick or what?
Baking soda also works pretty good. Helicopter mechanic showed me as he uses it to repair chips in the blade as it can be sanded.
I second the request many here have made to compare the different materials you used so far (and perhaps others) for these fixes.
Which one works best? Are they equally strong, equally resistant to heat/cold, etc.?
Ash is perhaps least good due to worse availability; baking soda and cement are both cheap and easily available;
Why haven’t they delivered Poplar to you yet?
@@RASKATFAETON what? 😂
Hi, can you try Monomer and Acrylic powder vs Super glue and Cement on plastic?
Is it better than baking soda?
what a great idea
What kind of cement are you using ?would white cement work?
Шикардос❤❤❤
Please make videos like this one hour long
The clay mold is cool
Very fine steel wool?
I wonder whats better for wood cabinets, this one or the cotton n glue
On wood I use wood sanding dust and super glue
I've seen this done with baking soda. Which is stronger baking soda or cement? Wondering if it would adhere to HDPE plastic
Aquascaping use this tool for glue tree, rock, and plant. Sometime use sand and cigarete sponge.
Good 🙂. But can one buy small portions of cement ? And how do u keep a bag of cement around without it going off ?👍
You have to buy 25kg
Store it in a sealed bucket
In Colombia we can buy for pounds so this is no issue, there you have your business opportunity 😅
Is that stronger than just using top quality superglue alone ?
If nothing else it has more body to it that superglue alone. Seems less brittle, too.
It basically makes superglue a filler
Sangat menginspirasi,teeimkasih
Where did you buy the container that never rans out of cement powder?
Can you find out what will fix petrol tanks on petrol garden equipment please everything i use leaks or softens the glues because of the fuel.
Really good idea. I love watching your videos. Have a good day
What brand of cement powder do you use?
Probably just any Portland cement would work.
@@RV_Chef_Life I wish that he would list the specific products.
Anyone doesn’t matter
C'est génial merci
Muito bom gostei
What is stronger, baking soda/glue or cement/glue?
A masterclass. Outstanding
Cheers! Thank u.
Thanks for it