I’ve never had an issue with JB Weld not firming up. Maybe it was old or you mix was off?
Can’t hurt to clean everything up and try again
Can’t hurt to clean everything up and try again
That's what I was thinking. I haven't had this happen before so I don't know what the culprit could be. It seems like it should cure in 24 hrs? If it seems like it could be scraped out of there easily enough I might try it again with new JB.
I’ve never had an issue with JB Weld not firming up. Maybe it was old or you mix was off?
Can’t hurt to clean everything up and try again
Okay, I can't say how old the JB Weld was, I don't know what the right mixture is because I don't have the tubes here at home, and this was my first time ever mixing it myself. I thought it looked right, so did Dad, so I just went with it. Obviously, I need some more practice with this stuff.Yes, after 24 hours it should be rock hard.
It didn’t get mixed properly.
If the stuff was too expired the part that got hard wouldn’t have.
BUT if you used the first bit out of the tubes, you shouldn’t. That first little bit in the tube of resin is a little bit cured already. And it’s not as good. You should discard the first little bit from the tube each time you open it, particularly if you noticed any change in the consistency.
I distintly recall Dad doing a 2:1 ratio. I don't know if that's what was on the instructions, but that's what he did. Maybe that was what happened...That’s possible there was some stuff on the application stick that didn’t get mixed well and it got scraped onto the top of the stuff that did. The correct mixture for JB Weld is always 50-50.
The tubes were the same size I think, but according to Dad, the instructions said to mix at a 2:1 ratio. I don't know; this is my first time using the stuff.I’ve never bought epoxy that didn’t come in identically sized tubes, so that you always mix it 50-50.
I’m doing a tire painting experiment myself right now. We’ll see how it works out. I’ve never tried this before.
Thanks TRM! Yeah, that saddle was the whole inspiration for the look of this bike. I just finished assembling the headlight in-between paint coats, so you'll be able to see just what that "old" cloth looks like behind the emblem soon. Glad to hear I passed the vibe check! Thanks!Just catching up here. I like the use of the 'old' cloth tieing in with the saddle. I think that it will look really good behind the emblem. Great rat vibe all around!
Thanks! Yeah, the headlight's probably my favorite part of the whole build, especially since it's made of 3 parts that don't sound like they should go together. I mean, who would think a spoon, a fence post topper, and a VW emblem would fit together like this?!Nice work all around dude!
The tire aging looks great to me
The headlight ‘upholstery’
But I REALLY like the use of a spoon for the bracket, that is a bit of ‘rat rodding genius’ right there!
Looking forward to to the final product.
Build on!
Thanks! Yeah, the headlight's probably my favorite part of the whole build, especially since it's made of 3 parts that don't sound like they should go together. I mean, who would think a spoon, a fence post topper, and a VW emblem would fit together like this?!
I'm excited to see the end result too! Thanks!
Amen!That is the beauty of RRB. Everything, and I mean Everything can be a bike part!
Your light is perfect proof of that!
Glad to do it!Thanks for the tire painting experiment!
This will prompt me to make sure that mine has been cleaned (Somehow, with something,) Before I try to put the Plasti-dip on.
Rubber is porous, and things do soak into it and get into the pores, so imagine this could be a critical step if I want the stuff to work.
Thanks! For reference, I used some cheap matte brown and satin (because I couldn't find matte) black acrylic paint from Walmart. I just used some paint brushes I had left over from art classes and occasionally a paper towel or my fingers to paint the tire. The key I've found is to apply very thin layers, but give them at least 15 minutes to dry before the next layer. Also, you won't need a ton of paint for this, so a small bottle of each color will be more than enough to get the job done.That tire treatment came out sweet! I'll remember to refer back to this when I need to age some whitewalls in the future. Great job!
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