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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied
to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? -- Tim Lamb |
#2
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On 05/12/2017 09:37, Tim Lamb wrote:
Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Do the manufacturers have a helpline? -- Cheers, Roger ____________ Please reply to Newsgroup. Whilst email address is valid, it is seldom checked. |
#3
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
Tim Lamb Wrote in message:
Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Hurry up & get the heating on! :-) -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#4
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On 05/12/2017 09:37, Tim Lamb wrote:
Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Don't know for sure, but I guess the aim of that "rule" is not to let the uncured product freeze. I think it will get quite viscous below 5 C and will cure more slowly, but I'd expect it still to work down to freezing. |
#5
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 09:37:10 +0000, Tim Lamb
wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. |
#6
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
In message , jim
writes Tim Lamb Wrote in message: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Hurry up & get the heating on! :-) Tell that to the plumbers! -- Tim Lamb |
#7
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
In message , Roger Mills
writes On 05/12/2017 09:37, Tim Lamb wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Do the manufacturers have a helpline? I have sent off an advice request. Nothing back yet apart from an acknowledgement. I thought I'd try the experts if any of them could drop fruitless Brexit wrangles for a moment:-) -- Tim Lamb |
#8
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
In message , Peter Parry
writes On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 09:37:10 +0000, Tim Lamb wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. Hmm.. what I thought. I suppose the doors could go back temporarily. I have a propane fired blower but don't fancy lugging the cylinder upstairs. -- Tim Lamb |
#9
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
Tim Lamb Wrote in message:
In message , Roger Mills writes On 05/12/2017 09:37, Tim Lamb wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. In an unoccupied house with all the internal doors removed the occasional fan heater makes very little difference:-( Any thoughts? Do the manufacturers have a helpline? I have sent off an advice request. Nothing back yet apart from an acknowledgement. I thought I'd try the experts if any of them could drop fruitless Brexit wrangles for a moment:-) Please hold, Iggy will be with you shortly... -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#10
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
In message , Tim Lamb
writes In message , Peter Parry writes On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 09:37:10 +0000, Tim Lamb wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. Hmm.. what I thought. I suppose the doors could go back temporarily. I have a propane fired blower but don't fancy lugging the cylinder upstairs. Answer back says lower than 5C will slow cure but implies still OK. -- Tim Lamb |
#11
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 11:31:05 UTC, Peter Parry wrote:
Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. wallpaper paste does near 0C to over 100C, epoxy don't know exactly but wider than 5-30. NT |
#13
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On 05/12/2017 21:14, jim wrote:
Wrote in message: On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 11:31:05 UTC, Peter Parry wrote: Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. wallpaper paste does near 0C to over 100C, epoxy don't know exactly but wider than 5-30. NT And the relevance to the OP is.......? Cue the "all their windows fell out" joke... |
#14
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
Tim Lamb Wrote in message:
In message , Peter Parry writes On Tue, 5 Dec 2017 09:37:10 +0000, Tim Lamb wrote: Heading back into Winter, I am starting to worry about the glue supplied to bond the flooring chipboard joints. Half done , lots to do! D4 comes with a storage limitation of +5 to +25 deg. C but I have been unable to find a *use* temperature range. Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. Hmm.. what I thought. I suppose the doors could go back temporarily. I have a propane fired blower but don't fancy lugging the cylinder upstairs. Heat rises..... -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#15
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
newshound Wrote in message:
On 05/12/2017 21:14, jim wrote: Wrote in message: On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 11:31:05 UTC, Peter Parry wrote: Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. wallpaper paste does near 0C to over 100C, epoxy don't know exactly but wider than 5-30. NT And the relevance to the OP is.......? Cue the "all their windows fell out" joke... Go on then..... -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#16
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 21:14:16 UTC, jim wrote:
tabbypurr Wrote in message: On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 11:31:05 UTC, Peter Parry wrote: Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. wallpaper paste does near 0C to over 100C, epoxy don't know exactly but wider than 5-30. NT And the relevance to the OP is.......? whoosh. As usual with you, rodney and whiskey. |
#17
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
Wrote in message:
On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 21:14:16 UTC, jim wrote: tabbypurr Wrote in message: On Tuesday, 5 December 2017 11:31:05 UTC, Peter Parry wrote: Polyurethane glue has one of the widest range of use temperatures of any common adhesive, anything from5 deg C to 30 deg C should be fine although setting will take a lot longer at low temperature. 20 deg C is the optimum. wallpaper paste does near 0C to over 100C, epoxy don't know exactly but wider than 5-30. NT And the relevance to the OP is.......? whoosh. As usual with you, rodney and whiskey. sstf -- Jim K ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
#18
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use temperature for caberfix D4 polyurethane glue
On Tue, 05 Dec 2017 22:08:14 +0000, jim wrote:
====snip==== And the relevance to the OP is.......? Cue the "all their windows fell out" joke... Go on then..... The first google hit on "all their windows fell out"... :-) It's an old joke so I wasn't too surprised. -- Johnny B Good |
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