It's odd, but among the various objections to hot hide glue that come up frequently is one against the way it smells, especially if it is "going off". Many long years ago, my mentor taught me to put a few drops of spirit of camphor--available at any drug store-- say a drop or two per ounce into the glue mixture. This dramatically slows the rotting process, and additionally gives the glue a very pleasant camphor-y smell--a bit like what you smell if you sand old style plastic keytops. Somehow I thought everyone knew about this. Greg Granoff ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron Nossaman" <rnossaman at cox.net> To: "College and University Technicians" <caut at ptg.org> Sent: Tuesday, November 07, 2006 8:03 AM Subject: Re: [CAUT] RE : key bushings > > > The trouble I've had with hide glue, aside from the usual like -is it > > rotten and stinks? -is it too cold or too hot? - is that it leaves > > strings behind it and gets all over the place. > > With a glue pot designed for working with hide glue, heat > control is a matter of keeping the pot plugged in. If it > strings on you, you have it way too thick. Neither is the > fault of the glue. > > > >And it is quite as > > capable of sinking into the cloth as white glue, if it's made up too thin. > > > > Susan Kline > > Which is why I apply usably thin glue to the wood instead of > the cloth. > > We do whatever works for us, and as long as performance, > longevity, and future service aren't compromised, it's the > right way. > Ron N >
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