How do I repair a crack?
Moderators: fivat, rilliet, Arnaud, nils
- christian61
- Rank 5
- Posts: 319
- Joined: Friday 17 November 2006, 19:40
- Location: Northern Bavaria, Germany
How do I repair a crack?
I just had a closer look at a snowboard I bought on ebay (for very little money) at the end of last winter, and I noticed that it has a crack about 10 cm long between the edge and the cap (see photo).
The crack is only about half a millimetre wide.
I'm thinking of repairing it with superglue (and then press it with clamps). Will the superglue dry when the crack is closed by the clamps?
The alternative might be epoxy, but how can I get it into the crack deep enough? Superglue is more liquid.
Thanks for any advice!
Christian
The crack is only about half a millimetre wide.
I'm thinking of repairing it with superglue (and then press it with clamps). Will the superglue dry when the crack is closed by the clamps?
The alternative might be epoxy, but how can I get it into the crack deep enough? Superglue is more liquid.
Thanks for any advice!
Christian
- Attachments
-
- crack 1.jpg (109.09 KiB) Viewed 4297 times
SWOARD EXTREMECARVER GEN4 168s + 161m, Deeluxe 225 + ACSS
- christian61
- Rank 5
- Posts: 319
- Joined: Friday 17 November 2006, 19:40
- Location: Northern Bavaria, Germany
I bought the board almost a year ago for ... (should I tell?)codighel wrote:what board is it?anyway,better the super glue.contact the one who sold you the board and say him is a fraudolent!!

Christian
SWOARD EXTREMECARVER GEN4 168s + 161m, Deeluxe 225 + ACSS
SuperGlue makes extremely good bonding - but only with the right kind of plastics. Otherwise, superglue does not even stick to the material, so it would be completely useless to repair that crack.
You could give it a try, but I suspect that the superglue will not be the right kind of glue.
If I were you, I would opt for one of those epoxy glues, those that come in two components that one mixes right before the use.
Mix them VERY well to activate the catalist.
Usually, those glues benefit from being exposed to heat, but clearly one should not want to put his beloved board inside an oven.
Careful application of a hair dryer is probably a good option; see if the instructions on the glue box mention heat.
Good luck.
You could give it a try, but I suspect that the superglue will not be the right kind of glue.
If I were you, I would opt for one of those epoxy glues, those that come in two components that one mixes right before the use.
Mix them VERY well to activate the catalist.
Usually, those glues benefit from being exposed to heat, but clearly one should not want to put his beloved board inside an oven.
Careful application of a hair dryer is probably a good option; see if the instructions on the glue box mention heat.
Good luck.
Alessandro - Extreme Carver wannabe
https://goo.gl/photos/WV43HYunDf9xEFcRA
https://goo.gl/photos/WV43HYunDf9xEFcRA
- starikashka
- Rank 5
- Posts: 963
- Joined: Friday 29 February 2008, 20:07
- Location: Russia
- Contact:
- nils
- Swoard founder
- Posts: 3043
- Joined: Friday 22 March 2002, 19:22
- Location: Lyon, France - Swoard team
- Contact:
gluying
epoxy is the only solution!
heat the tubes of blue araldite under a lamp or in hot water for a while so it gets more liquid and is able to go deep. use a strong blade to twist the crack open while pouring epoxy si it goes everywhere.put under a small press for 24h in a warm place. all protections using plastic beige tape.
good luck!
Nils
heat the tubes of blue araldite under a lamp or in hot water for a while so it gets more liquid and is able to go deep. use a strong blade to twist the crack open while pouring epoxy si it goes everywhere.put under a small press for 24h in a warm place. all protections using plastic beige tape.
good luck!
Nils
- christian61
- Rank 5
- Posts: 319
- Joined: Friday 17 November 2006, 19:40
- Location: Northern Bavaria, Germany
AZ and Nils, thank you very much!
I was afraid Superglue might not be the right solution. I have used it several times to repair Windsurfboards. I had forgotten that there are some kinds of plastic (PE and PP) that cannot be glued with superglue.
Heating the epoxy in hot water is an excellent idea. Maybe I should also heat the board before applying the glue.
I'll do it the way Nils suggested and then post the result.
Christian
I was afraid Superglue might not be the right solution. I have used it several times to repair Windsurfboards. I had forgotten that there are some kinds of plastic (PE and PP) that cannot be glued with superglue.
Heating the epoxy in hot water is an excellent idea. Maybe I should also heat the board before applying the glue.
I'll do it the way Nils suggested and then post the result.
Christian
SWOARD EXTREMECARVER GEN4 168s + 161m, Deeluxe 225 + ACSS
- christian61
- Rank 5
- Posts: 319
- Joined: Friday 17 November 2006, 19:40
- Location: Northern Bavaria, Germany
Hello everybody,
the repair went like this:
I didn't want to order araldite for the little crack. So I decided to use some cheap epoxy from the supermarket. I heated a metal plate and mixed the epoxy on the hot plate. Then I sucked it into a syringe and began pressing it into the gap. Then came the bad surprise: the epoxy began to harden only one minute after mixing it. The heat had not only made it more fluid, but extremely speeded up the hardening process (normally at least 10 minutes).
In panic I stopped filling the gap with expoxy and pressed the crack together with a clamp. Almost too late!
There was still a little crack which I hadn't managed to fill with epoxy. I waited a day and closed it with several layers of superglue.
After using a file, the repair is no longer visible.
I guess I was lucky. Next time I will use araldite!
Christian61
the repair went like this:
I didn't want to order araldite for the little crack. So I decided to use some cheap epoxy from the supermarket. I heated a metal plate and mixed the epoxy on the hot plate. Then I sucked it into a syringe and began pressing it into the gap. Then came the bad surprise: the epoxy began to harden only one minute after mixing it. The heat had not only made it more fluid, but extremely speeded up the hardening process (normally at least 10 minutes).
In panic I stopped filling the gap with expoxy and pressed the crack together with a clamp. Almost too late!
There was still a little crack which I hadn't managed to fill with epoxy. I waited a day and closed it with several layers of superglue.
After using a file, the repair is no longer visible.
I guess I was lucky. Next time I will use araldite!

Christian61
SWOARD EXTREMECARVER GEN4 168s + 161m, Deeluxe 225 + ACSS