Super Glue And CINNAMON Has An UNEXPECTED Reaction! The TKOR Super Glue and Baking Soda Trick!
Today we're mixing super glue, aka cyanoacrylate, with a few different substances, such as graphite, cinnamon, and baking soda. We'll also see how well you can cast coins with it. What kind of reactions will we get?
This super glue experiment is great for those interested in: super glue and baking soda tricks, boiling super glue how to, make super strong glue, DIY cyanoacrylate glue, super glue and borax hacks, and much more!
#SuperGlue #BakingSoda #TKOR
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Music by:
Rockin' For Decades - "You Only Live Twice"
Mellowdye - "Fuel and Fire (Instrumental Version)"
Sven Karlsson - "It's Gonna Be A Good Day (Instrumental Version)"
Glove Box - "Mission Superstition"
Victor Olsson - "Love Peace And Fuzz Pedals 1"
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WARNING:
This video is only for entertainment purposes. If you rely on the information portrayed in this video, you assume the responsibility for the results. Have fun, but always think ahead, and remember that every project you try is at YOUR OWN RISK.
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"How many times should we change our intro?" "Yes."
KeyStroke this makes sense No
Its true
JD The guy ur such a boomer
@@jdstewart01 r/wooosh
@@moral6581 hhhh
Bounce around on KZhead long enough and you'll end up watching glue dry. I need to go to bed 😑
Lol!
Yes your so right. How the heck did I get here. And we wonder how people are getting lost in the forest.
@Thomas Anslow nonce? Troll much BOT??
Credit
🤣🤣🤣🤣 Right!!!
Super glue and baking soda has been a staple of the model building community for more than 30 years. Acts like micro balloons and resin.
Musical instruments as well.
Thanks for the video. I have been using thin superglue (CA) for nearly 20 years in woodworking. CA is a near perfect glue for wood repair. It's primary negative is that it cannot be stained easily. CA can be stained, but it takes a lot of skill and talent to pull it off successfully. Baking Soda is a strong contender for a quick and easy replacement to the traditional filler. Fine, pure sanding dust from multiple species of wood that can be blended to match the base wood color of your stock. The one thing I have always desired was a cheap, easily colored filler to replace the expensive wood and water based stains I have used in the past. The best part of the video was the molds. The practical application for CA and mold making goes way beyond props. With what you have shown in this video, I can save hundreds on decorative wood hardware. It's nothing unusual to pay north of $100 for a single corner bracket that resembled cast iron. Usually, I would use such hardware to cover the structural hardware used. The potential to use graphite and aluminum dust is exciting. For the base cost of one bracket I could buy enough supplies to make every piece of decorative hardware I want for my next project. To buy all the pieces I want for the project, I am looking at a base cost of about $1,000. Thanks again for the video, I can hardly wait to start experimenting with this.
Please use protection as others have said, your eyes and lungs are vulnerable. Take care.
I've seen wood workers stain the dust they use for repairs first and get great results.
Try a product called Perfect Cast. It comes in a 4lb bag. It's powdered plaster that's 5x times stronger than normal plaster. I was messing with it to create molds and realized I could use it for wood working projects as a filler as it is cheaper and easier to work with. It sands really well. I haven't tried staining it but it does say it can be stained on the bag. Very useful to have around as a filler for repairs. Mixes with water at 3:1 ratio. Oh and buy it at hobby lobby for $7.50, Amazon is about twice that. Definitely a little hack I ran into accidentally.
Everyone else: stocking up on food Nate and Callie: uses cinnamon,powdered sugar to mix with super glue
Its prerecorded.
Everlasting gobstopper.
Working in a grocery store, cinnamon and powdered sugar are two things we actually have a fair amount of
Them: We’re just gonna be *mini* mad scientists today. Also them: *Cooking eggs with graphite and super glue*
@@junior645 wdym?
what if they microwaved the eggs after encasing them in the graphite? would they cook or just explode?
@@aminarc6627 the eggs didn't end up cooking? did u even watch the vid?
@@sophiavigliotti717 he didnt say that the eggs were cooked
@@ramensales3967 well he said "what if they microwaved the eggs" idk it's not a big deal
This was probably already mentioned somewhere in the comments but the graphite powder can be sprinkled on top of newly poured epoxy to give it a textured effect and make it appear similar to other stone-like countertops.
I love how Nate just casually says “yup that’s burning hot to touch it” I need that level of calmness in my life
I gotta admit tho - this was the 7th video maybe I watched on the superglue+baking soda trick, but it was, and continues to be, the only one mentioning any rise in temperature. all the others tell you the baking soda "dries it faster". I honestly didnt immediately equate that to "jumps to 200+ degrees F". definitely subscribing to King Random here, assuming he keeps his face on. Wear goggles dude.
My reaction when they added the glue to the bakingpowder: Wow it makes a red light! ... oh never mind
I had that thought too 😂😂
Same XD
Demon Devil231 And I bet you liked Your own comment
same i thought it was catching fire
Saym
Imagine trying to sell this house years down the road. There's burn marks on the driveway, bouncy balls in the garden, and now a paper plate glued to the porch.
That is quite an intelligent thought for a cat. And your profile picture is adorable. Can I adopt you?
That is smart
welll they must know it's owned by a KZheadr. so...
And don't forget the soot on the ceiling.
@@AmyAnnLand lol
You have given me great ideas of what to use this for. Fantastic research and testing on your part. Thank you for sharing your experiences.
Well, this is all rather fascinating, but I'd like to see some durability tests of the different end products. I've seen where the graphite mix becomes quite hard to the point where someone had a hard time drilling it. Interesting how the glue reacts with different compounds, just would like to see some practical applications for each one.
I have a lawn mower bag catcher ...plastic splitting at the rivet joints .....I used the thin super glue with baking powder....it took several layers but BAMB! It has fixed the issue and for two years now
6:24 - For cinnamon experiment
Thanks G
@@crazytingz7006 I got you
Bless you
Thanks
Thanks dude
Man, that video was super! My eyes were glued to the screen! And I’ll see myself out now...
Ya Know I believe you !
Your handling of aluminum powder with no PPE is insane!!!
I repaired a very broken ABS plastic motorcycle fairing with superglue and various powders including bicarbonate of soda and vsrious modelling powders. Worked an absolute treat. It is durable and is taking me through winter biking....until I drop it again.
This would be perfect for quick cosplay repairs - you could realistically carry everything you need in a pocket of a bag.
Cosplay? iDubz?
you'd have to be in an outside con- most indoor cons dont allow super glue or science experiments. (I'm your 69th like lol)
Yeah that could work!
I got like 200 (As in 👍200)
I got 169 :)
For the impatient: 1:50 baking soda 2:18 graphite 4:18 graphite with baking soda 6:10 powdered sugar 6:23 cinnamon 8:20 aluminum powder 8:35 aluminum and baking soda 12:00 they breath in super glue vapour 13:30 they attempt to cook eggs with super glue
thank u
Thank you so much
------ S P O I L E R A L E R T ! ----------------------------------
you are doing god's work
gee thanks
Nice experiment. I appreciate how the curiosity led the entire show.
It would be fascinating to see the shear and compression strength of the resulting solids.
That's what I was wondering about too, along with adhesive strength.
Pro tip: always wear a respirator or an FFP mask that covers your mouth and nose when working with fine aluminium (or most other metal) powder. That stuff is horrible if it gets into your lungs and the fine powders spread realy easily. I use them for pyrotechnics and only open the jar under a fumehood.
haha, jaybulls!
@@campbelljohn What's a jaybull?
Aluminum, along with barium and strontium are what they use for geoengineering. They're spraying it in the skies anymore.
Yea......but I think they put Aluminum in my Meth. I snort that all the time and am a walking talking example of exquisite health. 😃
Super J no that’s called msm. Live it, love it, learn it, but please please don’t burn it. No bueno super j my mane yo and always be sure to develop poly usage so you have something useful and appealing for you to level out the trauma trout. Ps I don’t know what a trauma trout is but it rhymed. I’m thinking it’s an anxious fish that is in pain and could use some help from more than kelp.
NEXT EPISODE OF: We burned our house down accidently. Callie: With SCIENCE!
🦵🏿🦵🏿
Thank you so much for all of the likes! I have never gotten any more likes than my own and maybe one or two people.
Why did you make two comments
《 ŚŵēėtTårø Bëâñ 》 cuz he can
The fire department rolls up and asks how did the fire start sees Callie with an evil grin then says well enough said.
AMAZING to me that you two are doing experimenting without eye protection. And even breathing protection. Truly inexcusable.
Well this is America sooo…
KEREN ...
@@stevelowry9127 I think it’s a valid point.
LOL oh no
@@redpillnibbler4423 Valid but not needed either. They can do them and Karen can do Karen.
Been repairing things for 15 years this way glad u r showing the world this
4:02 Do you know what else is every art student's nightmare? *Finding a job*
So true my art friend would just die if she had to work a normal job 😉
Gabe well, we’re both art students, and we did it! Don’t give up!
Dont do art then, do it as a hobby
Oh dang lol Calli actually replied
Calli with TKOR wait are you the real account?
TKOR: "Don't try this at home, we are professionals." Then proceeds to conduct chemical reaction experiments with Super Glue without wearing a respirator. 12:57 - What did we learn, Nate?
Jemagu ohh it bubbles. gets closer.. no googles. .. no face shield. paper mask?. nothing
Not only the chemical reaction aspect, but the very fine graphite and aluminum powders. I was cringing as she was dusting off her hands in front of her after handling the aluminum powder...
fking ALUMINUM DUST cmon KOR you're better than this
Not only that, but they recommend this to cosplayers. So basically they're saying do try this at home.
Lmfao they aren't professionals. They're just kids doing pseudo scientific experiments.
Cool, I knew the bi-carb trick but not the graphite powder one. I've used the bi-carb trick for fixing heaps of stuff but it can be a bit hard to work with because of the instant reaction. Looks like graphite's a bit easier to work with for the same result and might even be a bit harder/ stronger being that graphite is powdered carbon. Mix some carbon fibre in there as well and it would be strong asf.
Graphite is an additive for epoxy to make it highly abrasion resistant. Coating bottoms of boats that will be beached a lot. Etc.
Adding fine aluminum powder to your gloves, hitting your hands together and wave a lot close to your face. Perfect instruction how to inhale the powder...
And drink mercury afterwards
@@horurkristinsson5292 Most of the mercury remains metallic, so not a huge deal unless you breathe it or make a habit of drinking the stuff... I'd say that breathing the aluminium powder is if anything a scarier prospect as that's probably not going anywhere once it's stuck in yer lungs.
He knew what was up. Look at his reaction when she opens that bag and sticks her hand in.
I made a walking cane for my father and filled cracks in the wood with sawdust from the same wood pressed into the crack and superglue dripped on it. Worked like a charm and made a near invisible repair.
Whats the temperature tolerance of the baking soda/superglue "plastic"? How high can you go before breakdown?
Matt I use epoxy with dry powder pigments. I have found it’s best to try to match the darkest colored streaks in the wood; it depends on the wood though.
+Matt: Awesome tip!
@@rodblack4368 Its very hot but cools down very quick, doesn't melt adjoining plastics.
Thanks for sacrificing your health in the name of science. Please keep us posted on the side effects from exposure so we can continue to learn from you.
Please address future correspondence to Forest Gardens Memorial perpetual care org.
Love it!!! your work is amazing.
6:23 for cinnamon and glue reaction
Cool thanks
@Nico Cyso *marry me* ... I MEAN thanks!
the hero we all need
Thanks mate
You are awesome!thx!
Most people think glue just makes everything sticky Cinnamon would like to say otherwise
Can you repair something using this reaction .?
Cinnamon: otherwise
For your cosplay coins and buttons, try covering them with gold foil once they've hardened.
I just saw this video. The ideas you tried at the end for casting items would be useful for making bezels to wrap around coins so they can be worn as a necklace. I wonder if a 3D made mold made of nylon would be better at releasing the casting. Also it would be interesting to see the reaction between the different super glue mixes and the different commercially available cast release products. I live in a one bedroom apartment so random testing is not really something I can do. Making castings in a acrylic box powered vented to the outside is easy thou.
Just use resin. It's readily available formulated specifically for whatever application you want to use it for, far cheaper, able to be any color you'd like by mixing in dyes, and intended specifically for the purpose of casting. I used to use resin cast in silicon molds to flawlessly reproduce miniatures for warhammer 40k. No need to reinvent the wheel.
hey guy umm i’ve got a real quick request? everytime you guys say a temperature in fahrenheit can your editor please put an caption with the celsius temperature that would be amazing from your biggest fan in new zealand
Rum_And_Coke yeah, or you can look it up just like every American unfamiliar with SI ( there are a lot of us who are perfectly familiar with SI) watching something in metric.
I felt that
It's the same conversion as bald eagles to football fields .
Well, Fahrenheit for me still is a movie and has nothing to do with temperature...
Peaceful Scrimp school shootings per hamburger
This is why we don't put Callie and Nate in quarantine...
Why did you make two comments
《 ŚŵēėtTårø Bëâñ 》 you also did
But they’re together! How are the quarantined when they’re together and there’s also possibly a cameraman
@@tar4825 Because I can xD
yes
One thing I was curious about: Could you check conductivity (or resistance) of the graphite castings? I'm wondering how much coupling between powder grains there is. If they're not touching, the resistance should be pretty high but otherwise, it opens up a few interesting possibilities. Old carbon resistors were made by compressing graphite powder with talc in various ratios to get different values and when you mentioned mixing with epoxy, it reminded me of a conductive paste made using powdered silver and epoxy for repairing pcb tracks.
With carbon, you can buy regular pigment grade fine carbon black, or a conductive grade.. which has different surface structure that promotes interconnection in a composite matrix. I never saw much happen with graphite powder in an adhesive matrix, but YMMV.
@@gertnood, thank you. That's very interesting and informative.
It will conduct electricity. Sometimes you get black, matt plastic that has carbon added to make it look like that and that conducts electricity. I remember Fuji had a problem with battery drain on one of their cameras because the hadn't realised the black plastic had carbon in it and it was draining through the battery cover.
Yes, @@yann664 . There is also an entire range of products made that way deliberately to conduct electricity. We use them in the electronics industry because many devices made with the various MOS technologies are extremely static sensitive so packaging, plastic container tubs, black foam inserts, etc. all conduct electricity, albeit with high resistance/low conductivity but enough to form a DC path to earth or otherwise, dissipate any built up static charge. One place I worked actually got lino designed and manufactured with the company logo and in the corporate colours but with millions of embedded black plastic flecks in order to dissipate static charge. We all wore ankle straps that had a conductive strip that tucked into the sock and another conductive rubber strip that made contact with the lino as we walked around.
I worked as a plastic injection mold maker. We used Eastman 910 glue to repair graphite electrodes that were used in electrical discharge machines (EDM) to burn cavities for the molds. The conductivity was not affected.
When I see what you're going to attempt to do I often think "Why?". Then you start the project, and I go "oh, wow!".
“It’s glued to the porch” loosely translated: the kids are in troubooooooolll
TwoFoot Giant their fleece lining was very thin. But it’s okay their professionals
I used to work in an engineering consulting center for adhesives, I've done tons of experiments with all types of cyanoacrilate adhesives (superglue). When you blow on a superglue to make it cure faster, what you're really doing is adding moisture from your breath. It's not reacting at all with anything you mix it into other than the moisture content. When you mix a fine powder with superglue, you're giving it a ton of surface area that has moisture on it to react with. In addition, the reaction speed increases with temperature.
Bravo! Someone understands the chemistry behind what is being witnessed. This was exactly what I imagined was actually happening. Thanks for illuminating the effects. Some people advocate refrigerating the glue bottles to prolong their material usability - I am not sure how well that works, especially as the glue will precipitate condensation on and in the bottle and glue with the result of accelerating its polymerization. I put my bottles in a tightly closed mason jar with silica gel adsorbent/desiccant and only use it when the relative ambient humidity is low. In veterinary medicine we use tissue CA glue to reoppose clean wound edges. It polymerizes quickly due to the moisture in the tissues.
Thankyou for explaining this
A word of caution: while using superglue on a wood model, I burned my eyes with the fumes. My eyes actually bled, causing blurred vision and a lot of pain. Even the supposed CA with no fumes can be harmful. Just for your information.
Well, it's inherently volatile. But that's only an issue if you don't ensure that nothing that evaporates from the workpiece can get into your eyes, like via a full-face respirator or strong exhaust fan.
CA?
@@kish1865 Cyanoacrylate. It's the primary ingredient of superglue and crazy glue and every other brand of rapid curing adhesive.
Should use superglue to fix your eyes
I use this method to repair guitar nuts. Great stuff!
Every guitar-tech on this planet knows the bakingsoda-superglue trick. When the slot of a guitar-nut becomes to deep (from wear or if you accidently filed it a stroke to deep while adjusting the guitars action) and you don't want to remake a complete nut, you can fill up the bottom slot with thix mixtures since it makes a almost glass-hard composite.
Fender guitar techs also use it if you have splits in the fingerboard.
As a scale modeler and miniature painter, that baking soda and super glue mixture is absolutely AMAZING!
I wonder how superglue and iron filings would work? You can gather the iron filings with a magnet, a strong one is best. Have the magnet underneath the filings to affect their magnetic orientation, hopefully you can get it mixed before it sets. It would be interesting to see how that turns out.
🤣 funny last frame there! Great info too
+5 for the use of gloves. -50 for the lack of eye protection. The last thing you want is an exothermic reaction glued to your corneas.
Someone used the word "exothermic" before I did
They already have some
and -20 for not using Gunpowder with superglue.. I really wonder, what this would do?
@@thomaskaiser148 pyroplastic. The super glue won't wash out the saltpeter. There also a chance it could ignite during cure. Not a big chance, but a chance all the same, considering it can be ignited by flipping a light switch across the room
metallic powders...no masks
Metal filings from a bench grinder and medium super glue work really well for patching together broken headlight brackets on cars.
9ìik8ko
How did you figure that out!? Awesome thanks
Do u do MOTs? Lol
Hey this is a great idea!
And many other thing..
You both are awesome. I love your work!!!
Looks really useful for mold work.
I burned both corneas twice, then two weeks later I could see clearly again, so I read the instructions. ventilation, eye protection. Ten years later, I'm still allergic to balsa dust & super glue fumes. I'm old, so healing way slower now. Twice as cautious now
Mate I've been burned doing the same , not the eyes thankfully. One other time I spilled some of that really thin glue on my jeans. That burned so bad.
@@rainmanj9978 I wouldn't use it on a radiator mate. If you can afford it get some Devcon
@@rainmanj9978 it only burns if it's on your skin. It can give off those noxious fumes though if it's accelerated to dry too quickly.
I smoked super glue once.. thought it was some meth crystal dropped on my floor... never again... my lungs felt like they froze collapsed had to drag myself to bathroom and slowly drink water and lay in tub.. until i felt better...
@@rigobertovillalobos3614 very scarey
Cool video but You really should be wearing a mask when working with any metal dust.
Just watched this video. Guys you are awesome, although I was aware of this concoction, there are so many who don't know this. You've said so many from anxiety or panic attacks for costumes etc. Now the aluminum powder I was aware of and I freaking love that idea. Thanks so much .
Love what you guys do! I use this method to repair Paramotor propellers. I would love to do a vid with you guys someday.
Thanks forkeeping up the legacy!!!
what everyone else sees: graphite hardening with superglue. what I see: new way to crate durable scale asphalt.
hoestly i don't think it is durable at all, he had to hammer a few hits into the egg, the asphalt is being squished into the ground with literal vehicles that weights tons, water is also a problem, superglue fumes... terribad... xD
Joachim Von Grimorium SCALE asphalt, which would be used for models, not actual use on real roads.
@@JoachimVampire I'm thinking at 1/87th the scale you are man.
Revus like for 40k or dnd?
@@JoachimVampire He hammered the egg with a chisel, which is way more force per square inch than most vehicles with their weight spread out over their wheels. Do you really think asphalt would stand up to a hammer and chisel any better?
Awesome things to know... Thanks for sharing...
That’s pretty cool…..impressed!
"200°f" it's definitely warm.. Me: Converts 200°f to °C.. Me: "93,3°C is... Warm???"
reverse for when I check my computer's temperature
apparently yep
Just think almost boiling
210 is enough to boil water at sea level.
Super glue: I’m sooooooooo sticky Cinnamon: try me.
Great video TKOR ! I just subscribed . I'm going to your homepage to see if you did a follow up video in regards to a question asked in previous comments about the texture .
Hey, great show!! I did not know you guy made these.
Someone: Hey, I have cinnamon and a gallon of super glue what will happen? Science: Some random stuff that only we know.
"We are professionals" conducts experiments with toxic fumes with no flow hood or respirator....
Inhuman Filth and most definitely beyond PEL
Yes that’s true but the fumes aren’t that horrible not enough to cause damage
@@mackenziewindress9979 i promise you if it smells industrial and it burns your eyes throat and nose you do not want it in your body at all. Basic lab saftey
Exothermic and fine powder screams eye protection
"experiments"
Fascinating vid !
Very useful! I just learned like 10 new things there.
You should try pouring the super glue on denim. I’ve had spills on jeans where they’ve literally caught on fire.
Oh yes, one of the joys of working with Super glue is rock hard spots on your jeans when you spill a little.😖
did you burn your legs
System 32 I have but I don’t notice usually. Pains of being a mechanic.
@@mikeyjohnson7713 pls post a video
I wonder if the superglue is reacting with the cellulose in the cinnamon like it does with fabric?
Watching two people mix chemicals and seeing how those chemicals (and Calli) react? Yes, please!
I found you guys randomly! I’ll have to share this with my other cosplay friends!
Density tests! LOOKS like graphite is harder than soda and the cinnamon is a foam? also Yall need some protection sniffin that lethal batch of science.
Did You Two have ANY skin break-outs or Lung problems after that? Because some of Us RC airplane Modelers have Big Break-out problems with SMALL amounts of the same brand products.
"That's why I've opened all the doors and windows" She says without any protection on her face. Followed by "Run there's fumes!!!!" 😂
the graphite and glue combo would be great for camping, you could use small amounts to make customizable rubberized string, then just seal it with a dab more at the ends
Wow this is cool mixing different items with super glue
So many people commented random things and has many likes so I'll try *sOdIUm* *aLgInAtE*
Didn't work that well for ya
Lol
Graphite
Graphite
Lactose
I absolutely love you guys keeping your videos up during such a dark time brighten my day so much you will never know how much we the tkor family appreciate all you do
Man the polished aluminium powder was most satisfying well done you two rather 👌
I think this would be worth revisiting with a mold release; microcrystalline wax, silicone spray, etc. This is friggin' awesome for quick molded parts. :D
I was wondering the same thing
PVA mold release agent might work well.
PROTECTIVE EYEWEAR , i learned that science rule in 4th grade, simple
It took your school district until 4th grade to tell you to keep your eyes protected during experiments?? Yikes
@@EricAustinYun oof
And masks especially for powder
.-.
I'm surprised that they didn't use protective eyewear and a mask. !!!!
Random fact: The first passengers to ever ride in a hot air balloon were a trio of sheep, duck, and rooster.
How many dislikes can my comment get?
So you are everywhere
SciFactsYT random fact: nobody asked.
@@oreoisawsum4983 random fact nobody asked would you tell who asked
Graphite powder is commonly used in epoxy for conductive flooring
you can mix graphite, carbon black and resins to make electrostatic shielding. you need to test the resistivity/conductivity of that graphite glue mix, i've been looking for a way to attach wires to graphite shielding.
I have managed to solder wires on to self-adhesive copper "slug" tape. You could try sticking some slug tape to your graphite shielding then solder the wire onto the slug tape? Just use a lower power soldering iton and solder quickly - before any plastic starts to melt.
"Stay Away from the Fumes" Me: *SNIFF* 👌👌👌👌👌
This is the most random thing ever and thats why youse are the king of random
Noooo - I beg to differ...the MOST random thing, EVER, was trying to inject a hot dog, with CO2!!
“youse”
Wow though. I'm going to use that casting technique. Very cool, you guys.
No its not
Fishkeepers have been doing this for a long time! We use this technique to glue hardscapes together 👍🏼
Independent variable: What you mix together Dependent variable: The reaction Controlled variable: The table
Steel Current controlled variable is what you mix since it's what you change, and independent is the table since it doesn't change
What why did you comment this
@@gri5in862 do not question the mighty one
The Tacocrew Wrong, they’re control variables, rather than ‘controlled’ variables. The point is that they’re the things that you control to be the same in every reaction to make it fair.
Constantinople, 1054 So by controlling them they become what, controlled?
The fleur-de-lis looked like brushed nickel when you polished it.
Man what has the king of random become. Went from rockets to playing in glue. Lol frr
Luthier's have been using baking soda/superglue mix for years to repair parts of the guitar like the nut that holds the strings at the base of the tuning head. It works!
Conducting experiments that produces fumes - no respirator or eye protection. GENIUS!
Pfft. As a fiberglass tech, Ive used Acetone as hand cleaner. Quit being sissies
This is literally a homemade Flex Seal We should have told Phil this.
Flex seal is more like rubber
THAT'S A LOTTA DAMAGE
NOW THAT'S ALOT OF DAMAGE
I use backing powder with quick-set CA (super glue) on my balsa wood model airplanes to fill cracks between panels that just don't have a tight fit. Works great.
Thanks for that worth a watch
AS a woodturner, I have made many inlays and filling of cracks using plastic powders, brass powder, coffee grounds and other things. For example, make a groove in the rim of a bowl, put the powdered material in, drop in thin CA, and voila'. I enjoy your videos.
One thing about cyanoacrylate is that with repeated exposures , EVERYONE becomes highly allergic to the stuff. And the reactions tend to be dangerous.
Why everyone?
@@kimarna I'm not sure, but I know among model airplane enthusiasts it's a major problem. Lots of people avoid the stuff.
Same thing is true for people who work with cocobolo wood. Eventually, everyone who works with it becomes allergic.
Are you sure everyone becomes allergic? I had a buddy of mine tell me he was allergic to cayenne pepper once because it burns him when he eats it. I told him that's what cayenne pepper does.
@@josephwilliams1915 I just know what the doctor in a hobby magazine said. He's qualified to separate allergies from not pepper. But it is nothing but an expert opinion. That and $4.00 will get you coffee at Starbucks. Personally, I'm careful with the stuff. I use it only in small quantities in exceptionally well ventilated areas.
Great experiments. I've used ca for over 30 years. Mostly to seal models. Of stone to harden surface. I use for paper cuts, hangnails and small cuts. First you clean area on skin and then disinfect. I use colloidal silver and after it's dry I seal with ca in small amounts. Pain gone and it heals faster. CA peels off within 12-24 hours from oils in skin.
Awww I wanted to see you mix the cinnamon on a mass scale