Five Glues For Woodturners – Answering Three Different Needs
The hardware and speciality stores
abound with adhesives of all sorts these days. Confusion can easily
beset the woodturner buyer unless the needs are known for the glues.
Thankfully four different and readily accessible glues are all that
is needed for ninety-nine percent of woodturning requirements.
First of all is the typical
woodworker's glue or aliphatic resin emulsion which most call
carpenter's glue or yellow glue. It is similar to polyvinyl acetate
or white glue but has a better tacky quality and less initial
slippage. Both dry to a bond that is stronger than most woods, at
least when applied to side grain. It is often used to attach a waste
block to faceplate turnings and may have paper separating the waste
block and the turning wood. In addition, it is a good glue to use
building up segmented turnings.
Second is another standby of many
wood shops, epoxy resin glues. This is a two part adhesive that is
great for attaching handles or any situation where it is necessary to
adhere metal to wood. It will also allow the joining together of damp
woods while most other adhesives require the wood to be dry.
Third is cyanoacrylate adhesives or
“super glues” commonly called CA glue. These have become the
standard of many woodturners. Thin or watery CA is used to fill
cracks in burls and other woods while the medium can be used to
attach waste wood to faceplate turning even on end grain or wet wood.
Thick CA can be used to fill voids in woods that might otherwise be
thrown away.
The rise in the popularity of turning
wooden pens has brought polyurethane glues to a similar popularity.
While some pen turners use CA to attach the brass sleeves to the
wooden pen blanks, others find the gap filling ability of the
polyurethane glues along with their great strength to be valuable in
turning pens and similar projects. It should be noted that the foam
of polyurethane glues which serves to fill the gaps has very little
strength but the the strength of the bond where two materials meet is
exceptional.
One of the least used or understood
glues in the woodturner's possible arsenal is hot glue from a hot
glue gun such as the crafters use. It can used to quickly make
temporary jigs as well as to hold waste blocks to faceplate turnings.
One should use the high heat and not the low heat glues.
A little common sense in the use of
five types of glues should make the use of each of them reasonable
and valuable to woodturners. Each has its place to play in the
workshop.