> Steve,
> I had cosmetic damage from loose cargo that smashed a dent in the outside laminate. This door is made with an aluminum frame with the inside
> Formica bonded (glued, no screws)to it, and a cardboard honeycomb bonded to the Formica to fill the inside of the door. Then another sheet of
> woodgrain Formica is bonded to the cardboard and the frame. I'm sure it was all done on a large platen with hot sprayed glue and a press and then
> the outside edges were machined perfect to the aluminum frame. 3 flimsy pieces and some cardboard and glue make something so strong you could use it
> as a bunk bed for an adult. Got it apart now and can't find a glue to effectively bond the Formica chips back together.
>
> My hinges are screwed to the aluminum frame, not bonded, so your construction must be different. Unless you are saying the frame has come unbonded
> from the Formica panels, in which case you are in the same boat as me, needing a good glue to rebond the panels to aluminum or anything else.
> Cyanoacrylate (superglue)does not work on naked broken Formica, wood glue worked better, everything else rubs off. GM had it years ago, but I'm sure
> there was some equipment involved... looks like sprayed on red contact cement.
Terry,
You are right in that they were assembled with a spray adhesive. At least mine were.
When they delaminated, I put them back together with moistened Gorilla Glue (a single part moisture activated polyurethane). I was ready for it to
swell on cure, so I had it supported on some 2*6 as strongbacks and used about forty clamps (when my father and I built boats and spares we needed
lots) to hold it from swelling and puckering during curing. I could not use an epoxy as it needed to fill a number of gaps that were probably OE.
Both that and the hanging locker (closet) door are good now.
Matt
--
Matt & Mary Colie - '73 Glacier 23 - Members GMCMI, GMCGL, GMCES
Electronically Controlled Quiet Engine Cooling Fan
OE Rear Drum Brakes with Applied Control Arms
SE Michigan - Twixt A2 and Detroit