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My young grandson lost his balance and caught himself with a hand on a train shelf and on my Lionel 16670 TV Camera car.  It broke a piece of the truck on the camera end, the truck with the worm gear on the wheel shaft and gear on the camera rotating shaft.

TV car Truck fix 2019-05-28 004

Doing a search on OGR forum I found some expensive glues for Delrin type plastic, the slick plastic the truck is made of.  Not wanting to buy and replace this truck or to buy more glue as I have two bags full in the refrigerator, I made a little test and glued a piece of tin to the truck after scratching up two small areas on the truck, out of sight.  I used some my "go to" JB Weld metal filled epoxy and glued a second piece with E6000 Industrial Strength Adhesive, an Aleene's tacky glue type clear, sticky flexible glue.  After 24 hours the both were hard to break off but the E6000 held better.

I make a backup piece from some tin from a 9 v battery case as the place where the truck broke had a small area to glue together.  This truck has to be strong to handle the gear on the TV rotating mechanism.

TV car Truck fix 2019-05-28 006

 

I glued the back up piece on the back of the truck, after scratching the area well with a sharp knife, with E6000 adhesive and clamped it with two cloths pin homemade pointy nosed clamps.

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So far it seems to work but I will be careful and treat the TV car with loving care.

Charlie

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Last edited by Choo Choo Charlie
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I don't think JB weld contains any metal at all.

Machining etc. produces no sign of it, not magnetic, does not conduct electricity, etc..   I think it is just a chemically stable, chemically resistant, machinable, hard setting chemical solidification/cohesion.

It will seperate from smooth delrin easily as JBW cure is glossy smooth. However, sanding/scratching give grooves for a pure mechanical bite to take place.  I.e., a thousand tiny dovetail joints once the epoxy sets.   I'm pretty sure that is why Charlie focused on including the info that it was scratched up with a knife; the knife scratches would need a very coarse paper to be equalled.

Adriatic posted:

I don't think JB weld contains any metal at all.

Machining etc. produces no sign of it, not magnetic, does not conduct electricity, etc..   I think it is just a chemically stable, chemically resistant, machinable, hard setting chemical solidification/cohesion.

It will seperate from smooth delrin easily as JBW cure is glossy smooth. However, sanding/scratching give grooves for a pure mechanical bite to take place.  I.e., a thousand tiny dovetail joints once the epoxy sets.   I'm pretty sure that is why Charlie focused on including the info that it was scratched up with a knife; the knife scratches would need a very coarse paper to be equalled.

JB Weld does contain metal.  Mix some up and put it on a magnet if you are curious.

I stand corrected, it is (slightly) magnetic.  (thanks)

I happen to have some JBW 1/4" thick around. The strongest magnets stick, weak ones like in plastic alphabet letters fall right off.

   Titanium is mildly magnetic and has very low lenz ability, but it's there I guess.  I had tried using it long ago on wheels, and they stopped conducting to the axle, I got no ohm reading either. I bet you some real good test equipment to read what's going on.  I don't know how to guess on "dioxide", but I'm supposed to see "End Game" with a good chemist and saftey engineer tommorow, hopefully I remember to ask what he knows.

For some contrast, I had unbreakable titanium alloy eyeglass frames I know were not magnetic enough to be be held up by a large electromagnet (junkyard crane)  

Fun: You could bend the metal temples wrapping the length around your finger and they'd spring back into shape. Ball the whole glass frame in your fist and they spring return back to shape.

Oh, no question about it; magnets stick to JBWeld.

I don't think it could hold a charge or anything that we could measure, but you sure aren't wrong.

  I started with the weak ones, moved to the strong magnets, then switched from test pieces that had screws and steel frame nearby, as I wasn't totally convinced. But JBW used on Bakelite, with just brass innards, the strong magnets did enough not to fall off under their own weight. They would not lift the bakelight uncoupling/unload button housing.

 If banged or shook even very lighty, they fell off. But that is still being attracted to a magnetic field, no doubt. 

I wonder how a neo magnet would fair? 

gunrunnerjohn posted:

Which part is the metal?  Here's the MSDS section on what's in it.

Nothing ferromagnetic in there, but that also only accounts for a little over 65%; even by weight that's not accounting for 100%.

In any case - very little substantially binds solidly & permanently to most forms of Delrin.  Get a replacement someday before the band-aid repair fails.

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