"gluing dwarven forge dungeon pieces" Topic
10 Posts
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doc mcb | 22 Nov 2014 10:27 a.m. PST |
Has anyone done this? What glues worked, or didn't work? |
m4jumbo | 22 Nov 2014 11:49 a.m. PST |
Are you talking about the resin pieces or the new Dwarvenite? I have used super glue on the resin pieces. |
doc mcb | 22 Nov 2014 12:30 p.m. PST |
Resin, I think; the dungeon pieces that were the Kickstarter, |
tima113 | 22 Nov 2014 12:33 p.m. PST |
Doc, kickstarter stuff is dwarvenite. I don't have a desire to glue mine, so haven't researched. I'd shoot a question to the df forum. |
Xintao | 22 Nov 2014 1:47 p.m. PST |
I have glued stuff to the new tiles. I used liquid nails to no ill effect. I would not use super glue. Xin |
doc mcb | 22 Nov 2014 3:06 p.m. PST |
Whatever I use, it's going to have to fill some gaps. Wonder how hot glue would work? |
ordinarybass | 22 Nov 2014 6:48 p.m. PST |
Hot Glue should work. What are you gluing them too (each other or a base) and how permanent do you want it. |
doc mcb | 22 Nov 2014 10:34 p.m. PST |
I'd rather avoid a base -- but could if necessary. And they will be moved, and played with by kids. So fairly tough. |
53Punisher | 23 Nov 2014 4:25 a.m. PST |
I've never tried to glue them yet, so I can't offer any good advice on that, however, whatever glue you finally decide to use, I'd definitely pin the pieces as well since they will be handled extensively. |
ordinarybass | 25 Nov 2014 8:52 a.m. PST |
If they're going to be played with by kids and moved and you don't want a base, I'd recommend 2 part epoxy. It's the strongest option and the only one that might let you get away with not pinning, (though that's a good idea) especially with floor tiles that don't have an adjoining wall for support. |
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