I have plenty of the patches left. It's pretty much the glue that makes me keep having to buy more kits. Why do puncture repair kits only have one tube of glue? Is there anywhere where I can buy just the glue in bulk?

The problem appears to be when air gets into the tube of glue - if air is present in the tube, evaporation will take place. This air can enter the tube during patching, or from a poor seal between the cap and the tube.


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I wanted to use the glue again last night (9 months since I last used it), and it was no longer usable, but since there was liquid glue in the tube when I last sealed it, it probably would have been usable for at least another 3 months.

One problem I experienced is that the cap split on the fifth reseal - this may have been because tubes aren't really expected to last that long, or possibly because I was being too forceful screwing it on. In any case, the excess glue sealed the split.

I think those tubes of glue are pretty much universally the same and I've never had an issue with a tube drying up (surprisingly). Maybe try to get the tiniest bit of the stuff around the rim of the tube so that when you close it up that will dry up and create an airtight bond that will protect the glue inside. Come to think of if, that's probably why I've never had a tube dry up because I use the tube itself as the applicator.


You can buy the tubes of glue separately but they cost roughly as much as the patch kit itself. If you really wanted to buy it in bulk, you could go to an automotive shop and purchase a tub of the stuff. Regardless of the application, it's referred to as "vulcanizing fluid"


Glueless patch kits will get you home. That's about it. Not nearly as reliable as glue type patches.

The cynic in me says, "So you will buy more puncture kits". I too have never been able to reseal the glue well enough to use it more than twice, and only then when I had two punctures a short time apart.

I think that repair kits are thought for repair shops where patching tubes is more frequent, so you can use all the glue before it dries up inside the tube. Smaller kits that are for emergencies include two to five patches, and a very small tube of glue, generally enclosed in a disposable case, but are not universally available.

My trick to get a little more out of a glue tube is that I pile up a few punctured inner tubes, and patch them at home, all of them at a time so I use more glue every time. Then I always carry one of these tubes in my backpack so I just change the tube, instead of patching while in the trails.

I peeled open the small metal tube to find some rubbery residue.I figured this was all that remains once the solvent "dries up".So I pulled the residue out of the tube, rolled it into a ball (about the size of a kernel of corn), and placed it into a ceramic egg-cup. I then added a few drops of "general purpose thinners". ( I had also experimented with other fluids, such as turpentine, acetone, metho'....with varying results).Anyway, I let it sit overnight, and next morning I was able to mash it into a "glue" about the consistency of honey.I have now used this rejuvinated glue to do a standard patch. I will see how it performs tomorrow, and share the findings.

I had similar problem with a tube of super glue. My mother-in-law suggested that I put the tube in the freezer. I actually store the tube in a glass bottle and close the cap - to avoid contact with food. The glue never dries up. You can try the same with your glue.

Let's see this situation. My daughter had a sticker and she stuck it to her leg, arm... several times that the glue or sticky substance on the back of the sticker became less strong and it was difficult to properly stick the sticker to the wall because it might have fallen off.

There are a few things that would make your sentence more idiomatic and succinct, but the main focus of your question is about your use of the expression 'dying down' with reference to the glue. In short, no - that isn't an idiomatic expression.

The most common thing to say would be that the glue had 'dried up', as this is the usual reason that glue loses its strength. We might also say the glue had 'worn off', especially on something like a sticker or an envelope that is pre-glued and the glue is no longer there.

Washing plate - Every 2-3 prints or when the glue is visibly messy on the plate.

I wash the entire plate in warm soapy water (Dawn\Fariy\whatever detergent you have to get rid of oils) - then I apply glue stick across the whole plate basically.

How often should you replace the glue layers that's supposed to be applied before printing? Some say you can do up to a few prints, such as in this forum, while others say to replace it every print. What is the correct approach?

Depends on the glue and on your tolerance for messy undersides on your prints. It's fairly common for some of the glue to come off with the print. Or you may have marks from scrapers or rafts. Do you want to touch up that spot and have some artifacts on the bottom of the next print, or clean and redo the bed to get everything flat?

Gluestick is pretty easy to wash and reapply. It can also be freshened up with a gentle spray of water, smeared flat, and redried, or more gluestick added on top. It will really come down to your preferred workflow.

I usually add some glue each time I print a new part. I re-apply over places where recent part left a visible "footprint". But after a few prints, the glue layer becomes too thick so it has influence on the height of the first layer. If so, I dismount the glass and clean it with hot water. I do this after about 5 prints... (+/- of course).

As noted in the answer to the other question you asked, the Flux Delta steel plate bed will handle multiple layers of glue. The determining factor regarding this particular printer and specific glue is how many ripples, bumps and/or lines you are willing to tolerate on the first layer of your prints.

You'll notice that a print made with a couple layers of glue, freshly applied, will have a relatively smooth surface. Peel off the model, apply glue over the now-cleared areas, and you've created a slightly-less-than-smooth surface for your next model.

The common rhetoric is that product managers should act as the glue between engineering, design, and sales. This mindset was a trap. When I* first started as a product manager at Tesla, I was so set on being the glue -- being the conduit of all information and communication, shuffling mocks and comments between engineering and design -- that I found myself working many hours while not getting a lot done. While I felt important -- without me, the team would not be able to operate -- my aspiration to be the team\u2019s glue actually made me the biggest bottleneck for my team and took away time that I could spend doing things that product managers are best positioned to do -- to look at the forest.

While these may all seem obvious in hindsight, it can be easy to become the glue and stay the glue \u2014 feeling squeezed for the time and energy necessary to take your team and product to the next level.

It\u2019s easy to believe that being the glue is the goal of a product manager, but being the glue is only table stakes. As a product manager progresses in their career, what they spend time on shifts. You may start with 80% execution and 20% strategy, but you have to quickly get to a place where this number is flipped, and you are spending 20% on execution and 80% on strategy.

But although I am newbie, it is quite straightforward that one of the (La)TeX 's beauties is the glue. (La)TeX enclose letters and words into boxes and make them fit in a nice way into the line; and same for paragraphs to fit on the page.

I've been researching low-cost, yet strong, tamper-evident mechanisms, and purchased some low-cost glitter-hot-glue sticks as part of this research. The Amazon page advertising the sticks, seems to indicate (in the product photos) that they can be used on electronics; maybe the photos even hint as to it being possible to use the glue of the sticks, as a tamper-evidence mechanism when the glue is melted over a motherboard jumper (in a similar way to how glitter nail varnish can be used to implement tamper-evidence mechanisms over laptop screws). However, I cannot find on the internet, any other supporting information for using such glue sticks in such ways.

The easiest way to get a feel for what an impact the Glue Compressor device can have is to add it on the main output just before a limiter, and leave all the settings at their default. Next up remove all compression from your kick and snare drums and mix them slightly too loud. To make things easier to hear for this example adjust the Threshold till you get the needle peaking at around 10 dB compression, then adjust the Makeup till the limiter is just in action. Whenever there is a kick or snare hit the rest of the mix should be pulled down in volume to give room to them, and as a result movement and interest will be added, as well as the rest of the elements being glued together more coherently. Now 10 dB is a lot of compression on the main output, but it was good to exaggerate the effect, usually you want somewhere from 2 to 6 dB unless you are deliberately going for a lot of movement.

That is the most fabulous use of "garbage" I have ever seen. This has been most inspiring!


By the way, I've been known to tell a parent or two that have had issues with the glue waste that all that squeezing of the bottles is building those little muscles in the fingers that are needed for future writing skills. It works.

Ah yes, the pages of paper I have had to figure out how to even GET to the drying rack because they were really pools of glue. I love those the most; especially when, after they are done with that exploration, they stick ONE piece of confetti right in the center!


When I had an uptight director who hated that I let children "waste" the glue (couldn't get her to understand it wasn't a waste...any wonder why I don't work for her anymore) I did find that some of the children could be distracted by the sensory table filled with a water and flour concoction almost the same texture as the glue and glue bottles. It was even messier at times and, for some, even more fun! be457b7860

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