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kd6vpe
12-25-2009, 05:07 PM
First off Merry Christmas to all,
We got a ton of snow last night I have been spending the entire day shoveling out the driveway to the road. I have a question about glue. Everything froze last night including the glue that I had left in the shop. I this glue bad now that it has frozen. I brought it in to the house and it has since thoughed out but I am not sure if it is till good.
Thank you and Merry Christmas.

a1gutterman
12-25-2009, 05:20 PM
First off Merry Christmas to all,
We got a ton of snow last night I have been spending the entire day shoveling out the driveway to the road. I have a question about glue. Everything froze last night including the glue that I had left in the shop. I this glue bad now that it has frozen. I brought it in to the house and it has since thoughed out but I am not sure if it is till good.
Thank you and Merry Christmas.Can knot say. Does it have a warning against freezing? Can you go to the manufacturers web site and find out? Can you test the glue on a couple of scrap pieces of wood? If the glue "looks" now like it did before it froze, the chances are good that it is oakay. I wood try it out on scrap today and see if it holds tomorrow.

mickyd
12-25-2009, 07:17 PM
I'm with Tim. Check the manufacturers website or bottle precautions. Reputable manufactureres will discuss that specifically. I keep my superglues (aka CA glue or cyanoacrylate) in the freezer all the time. It extends shelf life from about 3 years to indefinite.

kalynzoo
12-25-2009, 08:05 PM
First I must say I cannot fathom the question. Cold enough to freeze glue????
OMG (whatever that means).
My daughter-in-law who used to live in Moorhead tells me her dad kept the shop supplies in the cold storage basement during the winter. Also a concept beyond my comprehension.
Guess I would test the glue on scrap wood and/or contact Titebond or whoever.
I do know that woodglue sets much faster in temps over 100.
Merry Christmas from Sunny California. :D

kalynzoo
12-25-2009, 08:13 PM
First I must say I cannot fathom the question. Cold enough to freeze glue????
OMG (whatever that means).
My daughter-in-law who used to live in Moorhead tells me her dad kept the shop supplies in the cold storage basement during the winter. Also a concept beyond my comprehension.
Guess I would test the glue on scrap wood and/or contact Titebond or whoever.
I do know that woodglue sets much faster in temps over 100.
Merry Christmas from Sunny California. :D

8iowa
12-25-2009, 08:25 PM
Most yellow glues like Elmer's and Titebond are water based. I would get some new glue. When you consider the time, effort, and materials in a project, the cost of the glue is insignificant.

My workshop in the U.P. definitely gets below freezing, for many days at a time. I keep all freeze sensitive materials on one shelf. Then, when I close up in the Fall they all go into a box and then down into the basement of our house, along with canned foods and other things from the kitchen. We have yet to have a freeze problem down there.

Meanwhile, here in Gainesville, Christmas day, it got up to 72 degrees.

mickyd
12-25-2009, 09:34 PM
Titebonds website indicates that their woodworking glues are freeze / thaw stable.

Elmer's doesn't address it (or for that matter, any technical specs):(

cincinnati
12-25-2009, 09:51 PM
Glue can go through a few freezes before it is unusable. When wood glue gets cold it kinda turns chalky. Never seemed to affect its strength. BUT..... If my glue freezes I buy new. Glue is cheap so why risk a project falling apart. In a project the wood can cost $300 but skimp on a new bottle of glue for $2.49????