This may be difficult to find outside of Japan, but Cemedine's High Grade Model Glue. I mostly use it as a canopy glue because it comes out clear and dries clear. It is also helpful for PE parts. Hasegawa Phantom kits in 1:72 scale have zero detail on the inside surface of the engine cans, so I bought some Eduard PE sets for those. You curve it around the inside of the engine cans. I first used CA, but it dried too quickly and wouldn't let me reposition it slightly. So the next Phantom I made I used this Cemedine glue, and it gave me plenty of time to move the brass around until it looked right.
1743045475057.png

I made a big mistake with trying to use the PE set for the Polar Lights 1:350 Star Trek K'Tinga ship. It comes with PE bands to make the windows look crisper, but I really wish I had not bothered with it because I ended up really screwing up the plastic by drilling out the areas behind the windows, which proved to be problematic. Now I'm trying to putty up the gaps left behind and the end result would have looked better if I had only just left the kit parts as-is.
 
Not really into PE either. Some of my kits have it and I really wish they'd just leave it out and let those who like it buy it aftermarket, or also include plastic parts for those of us that don't want PE parts.
 
@

Littlemarten

Hello,

Mercury Adhesives was a great tip !!
The CA with some working time allowing for the positioning of a part. Strong bond, I have yet to figure out how the tip works.

The webpage describes how. But the cap looks like it's missing something. Anyway, figured out a work around for now.
Open to suggestions...... amazing how some of the simplest things are beyond our reach LOL.

Made here in Atlanta was a suprise......
Pep
 
@

Littlemarten

Hello,

Mercury Adhesives was a great tip !!
The CA with some working time allowing for the positioning of a part. Strong bond, I have yet to figure out how the tip works.

The webpage describes how. But the cap looks like it's missing something. Anyway, figured out a work around for now.
Open to suggestions...... amazing how some of the simplest things are beyond our reach LOL.

Made here in Atlanta was a suprise......
Pep
Don't try to apply it straight from the bottle unless you get an add-on fine tip that fits over the rather wide tip on the bottle. I think Mercury sells them, but I've seen them online elsewhere, too.

However, I don't use those very often. I put a small amount of the CA on a flat piece of glass, then apply it with one of these. Here's a close up. for applications that need more, I use a toothpick. These make application very easy to control.
 
... also good for harpooning mosquitos!

I do something similar, only with a 'PE' tips that fit my knife handle, and push pins. A slight squeeze with pliers shatters any crusted on glue. I also like using the plastic (seems impervious to CA) applicator handle after the fuzzies wear off.

View attachment 142373
A de-fuzzed microbrush! Why didn't I think of that? Now what do I do with all these toothpicks?:D
 
Thinking how cheap sewing needles are in bulk, they also come in HUGE variety of sizes.

How do you keep the tip clean, like Barley does with pliers? Seems dangerous to the tip, do you replace them often?
I wipe the tip after use, and I have a small vial of acetone set into my work bench. The stopper on the vial has a tiny hole in it. I just insert the needle through the hole into the acetone. After each session, I take it out of the acetone and use a stainless steel brush to clear any that's softened but not dissolved. I also decant the acetone into a small, sealed bottle when not in use to prevent evaporation.
 
For years before this site went dark, the only sponsor they had was "The Looper", a C/A glue applicator made of p/e. Fit in your exacto handle...had a tiny loop on the end ....so I made my own from a stick pin and bent the end around into a tiny loop...fits in my old worn out pin vice. I've been using this for 12 years, and when it gets bogged down I throw a match at it and clean it up with some 800g sandpaper...
Oh and tea lights, with or without wax (with wax the glue lasts a couple hours before going goopy) makes a great C/A puddle holder.
IMG_20250330_141901528_HDR (1).jpg
 
I keep a small bottle of acetone at my bench, an old square bottle that used to have Testors Enamel thinner in it. The larger square ones with 1.25oz.

Could I just swish the tip in there a bit and wipe with a paper towel?

I've been using those tiny flexi-tubes with luck, and I have 100+ of the little buggers, but sometimes I need a smaller 'blob', think I'll be giving the half-loop pin idea a try.
 
I keep a small bottle of acetone at my bench, an old square bottle that used to have Testors Enamel thinner in it. The larger square ones with 1.25oz.

Could I just swish the tip in there a bit and wipe with a paper towel?
That's basically what I did before coming up with the "self sealing" cap.
 

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