Yes, consoles. Well, it should hold together of course. I thought there might be a specialist for the problem - or some kind of marble adhesive? Unfortunately, no picture yet but it is a type of three cm thick brown marble slab, maybe 15-20 cm in width...
If you get the two parts to fit together "dry," you can glue them with cyanoacrylate glue + activator. Then you wet sand away the seam. If there are small missing pieces in the visible seam, they can be "filled" with dry stone dust from the same windowsill and saturated with cyanoacrylate glue. You can make the stone dust by sanding down a sacrificial piece, e.g., from the underside of the windowsill.
Ahhh, there we have it! Cyanoacrylate - something... good start to fix the problem. But it's rarely that simple that everything just works. The old non-working white "glue" might make a mess for the moment, but I'll see how difficult it is to remove it, maybe it'll be easy. I'll get back to you with an update. Otherwise, is there any company of some kind that should be able to handle the matter?
Ahhh, there we have it! Cyanoacrylate - something... a good start to fix the problem. But it's rarely that simple that everything just works. The old non-functioning white "glue" will probably smear for the moment, but I'll see how difficult it is to remove it, maybe it will be easy. I will get back with a report. Otherwise, would there be a company of some kind that should be able to handle the matter?
Stone companies handle it brilliantly. If you have used white glue/wood glue/PVA, you have prepared for extensive work to clean this up. If you manage to get it clean (heat gun or ethanol or acetone), Biltema's cyanoacrylate glue with activator works well. Thin layer of glue on one surface and activator on the other a second before joining. You have about 10 s to apply the glue on one surface. The bonding seizes after 1-2 sec and is fully cured after a minute.
Brilliant description, I bow and thank you, and no - house fix something, I think it was on one of the cracks. But unfortunately, I have more pieces that have given up. I will glue and experiment. Thanks once again.
Pu700 holds up pretty well, but as others have mentioned, it's probably a good idea to glue an extra board underneath or place a bracket under the break.
The stone companies handle that brilliantly. If you've used white glue/wood glue/PVA, you've prepared for extensive work to clean it up. If you manage to get it clean (heat gun or ethanol or acetone), Biltema's cyanoacrylate glue with activator works well. Thin layer of glue on one surface and activator on the other a few seconds before bonding. You have about 10 seconds to apply the glue to one surface. The bonding catches in 1-2 seconds and is fully cured after a minute.
Hi again, I need to raise the thread as I am now in full activity fixing stuff in the house. I can't find Biltema's cyanoacrylate glue - or does it have a specific name? I can choose between stone glue and construction adhesive - or have I missed something? I can't find Pu700 anywhere, where can I find it (if Biltema's glues don't work)? I thought I'd try with glue as there is no need for load, except for maybe a flower pot, it's easier with the job too... right? Or am I thinking wrong here?
You only have a few seconds to match up, so make sure to prep. For example, place the pieces on underlaggspapp with a straightedge/ruler along one long side so you can quickly and safely align them straight. Apply an even layer of glue to the break surface of one piece and spray the other with activator, then press them together quickly and hold for 30 seconds, then let it rest for a few more minutes.
I would glue an additional smaller piece underneath to reinforce it. Ideally, it should be stone, but another type of minerlaskiva, like a leftover tile, might work. A wood piece might work, but there's a risk of it moving due to moisture and heat (guessing there's a radiator directly underneath).
That glue is really good and cheap.
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