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(04-10-2019, 08:58 AM)Nordic Wrote: <SNIP>
I just used some based on that test to repair a guitar neck tenon, we will have to see if it holds up.
I recently bought my first bottle of Old Brown Glue from TFWW, and I am very impressed with it. It's not liquid in the bottle, it still takes a warm bath to liquify it so isn't just a grab and go glue, but once heated up you have more working time than with standard hot hide glue.
Having a son's cello repaired and a brother's violin repaired, it is my understanding that easily releasing glue bonds is as important, if not more, as making a joint bond well. The last 'doctor' showed me a kitchen table knife as the means and gauge for separations. And, if it is to fail (suffer accident) it should fail cleanly at a joint. In both instances the breaks or failures were at joints. This criteria makes hide glues the preeminent choice in manufacture and repair of wood instruments.
I keep thinking my own wood gluing needs to follow suite. Salvage and repurpose is my second name, and the old furniture, using hide glue, is a dream to deconstruct.