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Gentlemen,
Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#2
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try DT or Specialized.
or for example https://www.google.com/#q=rubber+con...ement&tbm=shop contact cement not rubber adhesive. Henkel-Loctite has one last I looked. Weldwood red is super contact cement but its a liquid not thickened liquid like Weldwood in the glass bottle which is OK. |
#3
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On 2017-01-03 17:13, DATAKOLL MARINE RESEARCH wrote:
try DT or Specialized. or for example https://www.google.com/#q=rubber+con...ement&tbm=shop contact cement not rubber adhesive. Henkel-Loctite has one last I looked. Weldwood red is super contact cement but its a liquid not thickened liquid like Weldwood in the glass bottle which is OK. Thanks, I'll have to look into that. I read that contact cement doesn't make for a pliable connection which is required on the side walls. Maybe the people trying and reporting it on the web did something wrong though. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ |
#4
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![]() https://www.google.com/#q=tire%20sid...%3Ayoutube.com https://www.google.com/#q=tire+conta...vement&tbm=vid could be a movement video in thereā¦.dig the tire machine !!! no, sidewall patches are difficult as the sidewall flexes more than the center contact patch. I could try images https://www.google.com/search?site=i...k1.4Op_7Q5DHAA |
#5
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On 1/3/2017 7:04 PM, Joerg wrote:
Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. See an auto parts house for Tech rubber cement in the steel can. You might want their buffer solution too - very effective for cleaning before your patch. -- Andrew Muzi www.yellowjersey.org/ Open every day since 1 April, 1971 |
#6
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Right ! I forgotto... bought both from NAPA for a last try at rejoining boots to lugged soles.
Need jigsawing 2 squeeze together ply sheets closing top edges of the bathtub lugged sole onto the boot. |
#7
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On Tue, 03 Jan 2017 17:04:40 -0800, Joerg
wrote: Gentlemen, Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple cheap small tubes are available. The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. My LBS usually has small sealed tubes of glue. When I see them I buy four or five and when I open a sealed tube, in the kit on the bike, I replace it with another sealed one as find the glue has dried up is not quite so much of a catastrophe at home :-) Or you might try contact cement what I suspect is what is in the usual tire patching kit. By the way, "vulcanizing" implies the use of heat, and sulphur, and I remember when I was in high school working at a local gas station we had a clamp that had a sort of cup as part of it. We glued the patch on than clamped it and filled the cup with gasoline and lit it. When everything had cooled down the patch seemed to be a part of the tube, not something glued on. See: http://tinyurl.com/jdvfgbu for a modern electrical device to do the same thing. -- cheers, John B. |
#8
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John B. wrote:
:On Tue, 03 Jan 2017 17:04:40 -0800, Joerg :wrote: :Gentlemen, : :Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch :kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple :cheap small tubes are available. : :The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall :blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. :The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each :and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l :REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube :but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. :My LBS usually has small sealed tubes of glue. When I see them I buy :four or five and when I open a sealed tube, in the kit on the bike, I :replace it with another sealed one as find the glue has dried up is :not quite so much of a catastrophe at home :-) :Or you might try contact cement what I suspect is what is in the usual :tire patching kit. :By the way, "vulcanizing" implies the use of heat, and sulphur, and I Vulcanizing may have the connotation of involving heat, but it's a chemical reaction, which results in the sulphur in the rubber becoming crosslinked. Patches, at least the good ones such as Rema and park, are a multi-layered assembly. The top layers are for strength, the bottom (closest to the tube) consists of unvulcanized rubber, mixed with a vulcanizing ultra-accelerator (there are a number of zinc thiols that are suitable, which ones are used are trade secrets. ZDDP is typical, though). vulcanizing cement consists of a unvulcanized rubber particles, a solvent to carry them, and a vulcanizing activator. Cyclohexylamine is common, but there are others that will work, and are less toxic. The activator reacts with the zinc thiol, and causes the patch, the rubber in the cement, and the surface of tube to become vulcanized. There's not much free sulphur in the tube, because it's vulcanized, which is one of the reasons that it's important to properly scarify the tube surface before patching; it greatly increases the surface area of the patch. The reaction is not instant, but it happens pretty fast at room temperature, and continues for some time, until all the sulphur available has linke.d The accelerator in the cement is one reason that tubes of glue sometimes are just rubber, and not cement. -- sig 56 |
#9
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On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 02:47:50 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt
wrote: John B. wrote: :On Tue, 03 Jan 2017 17:04:40 -0800, Joerg :wrote: :Gentlemen, : :Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch :kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple :cheap small tubes are available. : :The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall :blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. :The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each :and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l :REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube :but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. :My LBS usually has small sealed tubes of glue. When I see them I buy :four or five and when I open a sealed tube, in the kit on the bike, I :replace it with another sealed one as find the glue has dried up is :not quite so much of a catastrophe at home :-) :Or you might try contact cement what I suspect is what is in the usual :tire patching kit. :By the way, "vulcanizing" implies the use of heat, and sulphur, and I Vulcanizing may have the connotation of involving heat, but it's a chemical reaction, which results in the sulphur in the rubber becoming crosslinked. It is a chemical reaction that occurs very slowly and incompletely without heat. Try mixing raw latex with powdered sulphur if you don't believe it. -- cheers, John B. |
#10
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John B. wrote:
:On Wed, 4 Jan 2017 02:47:50 +0000 (UTC), David Scheidt wrote: :John B. wrote: ::On Tue, 03 Jan 2017 17:04:40 -0800, Joerg ::wrote: : ::Gentlemen, :: ::Is there something stronger than the usual rubber cement in the patch ::kits? Ideally something that won't dry out so fast or where multiple ::cheap small tubes are available. :: ::The reason is that I sometimes have larger holes from side wall ::blow-outs. Not inch-long gashes but one or two tenths of an inch long. ::The tubes I use are super thick and, therefore, expensive. $15-20 each ::and that's not something to be thrown out lightly. Instead of the li'l ::REMA patches I need to use thicker rubber from an older sacrified tube ::but this has to be vulcanized/cemented really well. : ::My LBS usually has small sealed tubes of glue. When I see them I buy ::four or five and when I open a sealed tube, in the kit on the bike, I ::replace it with another sealed one as find the glue has dried up is ::not quite so much of a catastrophe at home :-) : ::Or you might try contact cement what I suspect is what is in the usual ::tire patching kit. : ::By the way, "vulcanizing" implies the use of heat, and sulphur, and I : :Vulcanizing may have the connotation of involving heat, but it's a chemical :reaction, which results in the sulphur in the rubber becoming :crosslinked. :It is a chemical reaction that occurs very slowly and incompletely :without heat. Try mixing raw latex with powdered sulphur if you don't :believe it. Yes, but fortunately the world has smart chemists who have invented processes that work better than sulphur and heat do. Vulcanizing accelerators are used in pretty much every rubber production process, because it gives better results, is faster, and requires less energy. -- sig 26 |
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