Full description not available
M**K
This stuff really works!
So a really nice person kicked off the door mirror on my car (Nissan) causing it to hang by a few wires. The plastic mounting bracket had been snapped completely. According to Nissan, my only option was a complete new mirror at around £300. Or was it? With only a few centimetres of 'surface' I wanted to try sticking the mirror casing back onto the mount. But the mirror is heavy - it has a camera and electric motors behind the glass and I thought it would be too heavy to stay stuck with such limited surface area, particularly when the car would be bouncing on roads, driven at speed on motorways etc.So I found this product and tried it before spending big money. Nothing to lose, right?I used the putty on both edges, held it together for maybe 10 minutes and it bonded. So far so good. I then left the whole thing for 2 days (I know you don't have to leave it that long, but I didn't need the car) before screwing it all back together. I sanded and painted over the white/grey residue (black) and hoped for the best. I took it for a short test drive, fully expecting the mirror to fall over when I hit the first bump.That was 2 months ago. Absolutely perfect. Solid as a rock. Great product. And saved me £300.
J**T
Glued badly cracked front bumper
Had an accident last minute before trip. Didn't have time for garages so I had to use something to glue the front bumper very last minute. Didn't do ideal job, but it held 1000ilea trip and back and another 4 hour journey to Wales and back. Although the crack was really big, had I not rushed the job I could probably still sand it and spray and it would look ok. But this bit I'll leave to professionals now
L**H
Did the job and in white was a bonus
Did the job and being in white was a bonus
D**N
My repair failed...
I wanted to repair a pinhole leak in a Spear & Jackson weedkiller sprayer - the kind that gets pumped up to pressure. Sadly the repair failed immediately. I had caked quite a lot of this stuff onto the leak area, I mixed it up thoroughly, I pounded it down, it set - rock hard... I left it even longer to fully cure... and then filled the container with water. All good. I then started to pump to pressurise it and within seconds liquid was jetting out again. The title of this review is deliberately "my repair failed"... because I accept it might be something I didn't do right. But the takeaway point is that it didn't work for me - the liquid seemed to find its way out underneath the hardened putty and then just exited in a slightly different location. I am now debating whether to give it a second go... but soon I'll have a container that is more putty than container!
H**1
Super, strong, (but thin and runny), epoxy. Stuck my plastic together.
Hi,Was desperate for something good because we snapped off one of our two door catches on the microwave; this meant that the microwave would not work. A new same model is £150!The catches are miserably thin plastic just begging to get snapped off.I am very happy to report that this epoxy weld sets hard as glass and sticks to the plastic catch marvelously. Microwave now working again perfectly!Actually the epoxy is slow setting, so firstly I stuck the catch in position with superglue (although the surface area was so rubbish that superglue alone would not have held for long).I do recommend this epoxy, it did the trick superbly. However, for anyone who thinks that it will be a thick mix (as e.g. araldite) and stay in place, then be warned, it runs like water! so I recommend that you bear that in mind and get the area prepared to contain the epoxy wherever it needs to stay. It will run straight off of any level surface, hence only 4 stars.
E**L
saved over 1k using this
I had a broken part on my convertible car to get a new part would be 1kwith this a 2 min job and mended the snapped panel perfectlywill buy again...
M**Y
Good adhesive
Very good product
A**W
Epoxy Putty That Sets Really Hard
I wanted something to mend a damaged plastic scoop. The plastic handle was coming away from the scoop, but was otherwise in good condition. I had tried a liquid glue but the repair did not last so I thought I would try this putty. It comes in a clear plastic tube. Open one end and cut off the amount required. Gently mold it between your fingers until there is an even colour - you're mixing off white and blue. Place the putty where it is required and wait. I left my repair overnight and by morning it was solid. The scoop has been used several times and there is no indication that the handle is likely to break. A product I can recommend for a number of different repairs.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago