I’m looking for some advice on how to bond a post-processed resin printed piece to a large PLA print. I assume my options are either superglue or maybe brushing resin onto the PLA, attaching the resin print, and hitting it with a UV light?
Is there a better way? Thanks!
Make sure to rough up the resin surface to be glued then use CA glue and send it. I’m sure it will be sufficient.
Rough up both surfaces.
Alternatively, if you want a removable bind, barges. It can be neater (barges is weird. You paint it on both parts after a few minutes, it’ll be not-tacky, but’ll bond to other barges. You can remove it with the application of gentle heat. It’s also flexible.)
Finally VHB tape from 3m is wonderful,
Y, just use a little file and gently rub it over the two places you’re going to be connecting. Then use some E6000 and a clamp. I can’t remember why this is, but I do know that glue tends to stick best when spaced out. Perhaps the roughing up of the area permits for micro-gaps which allow for the two to better stick? Or that smooth faces in general do not stick well to one another. But I do know whenever gluing plastic I just grab a little metal file and always rub it over whatever part I will be hiding with glue.
I think it is more to do with increased surface area - more molecules of the glue are in contact with the part.
Seems so strange in my head, that you’re removing body yet the surface area is increased? But I actually truly don’t know the science (and actually did not look it up because it’s pretty irrelevant to me). But I do like to look stuff up. I think I just fell down the pie-hole and didn’t take the time. Maybe it’s like a razor, where as you sharpen it and the surface area changes the quality of the shave?
Eh, now I really do have to look into it. Cause clearly you’re saying what it is - I just gotta figure out how you subtract material and it increases surface area. To the internet~
Tada:
Plastic Bonding 101
“It takes the surface from a flat surface to a rough surface. So what was previously flat, now has peaks and troughs. In most cases, an increased available bonding area leads to a stronger joint.”