Wood glue

Wood glue

Wood glue is an adhesive used to tightly bond pieces of wood together. Many substances have been used as glues.[1][2][3]

Types

Usage

Several wood glues have poor "gap-filling" ability (they bond tightly to wood, but not to themselves). Therefore, woodworkers commonly use tight-fitting joints that need surprisingly little glue to hold large pieces of wood. Most wood glues need to be clamped while the glue sets.[2] Epoxy resins and some other glues can be thickened with structural fillers (or with thicker formulations of the resin) to help fill gaps, however it is preferable to try to minimize gaps in the first place.

Mechanical resistance

Fine Woodworking magazine ran a number of tests to evaluate the mechanical resistance of wood joints with different glues:[13]

Glue JOINT STRENGTH AS % OF TYPE I PVA GLUE Average strength (kilograms)
Type I PVA glue (Waterproof) 100% 918
Slow-set epoxy 99% 904
PVA glue 95% 873
Liquid hide glue 79% 723
Hot hide glue 76% 694
Polyurethane 58% 528

See also

References