• Reviews around piece (2.44 of 5)

    J-B Weld 8265S Ntroaterproofme 2 oz Cold Weld 2OZ Adhesive

    • After spending nearly an hour after blocking and supporting the pieces together, I mixed and applied the epoxy in a manner that would guarantee the maximum coverage and support
    • To apply, I use a scrap piece of cardboard to mix it on, I split off a piece of shim (or a popsicle stick would work too) to use as a stir stick and applicator, and fix away.
    • Often you can arrange pieces so that the weight of the top piece will hold the joint together until the JB Weld cures
    • Also, if the surface is slippy, run a fine grit piece of sandpaper over it.
    • This includes to repair broken brackets on engines and seal even intake or exhaust manifolds from holes, rust, or broken pieces on metal
    • used a magnet to hold two fragile pieces of metal together until this product set.....worked beautifully..love this product.
    • I used it to bond some small stainless steel pieces to plastic inside my car.
    • Broke a piece of MIM that if not repaired, it would have cost me hundreds of dollars to replace the part that housed my high mounted 3rd brake light
    • I'm making a custom elevated landscaping tier and I needed the unsupported pieces to remain permanently connected
    • A radial arm saw drum sander attachment is handy to hand-fabricate the hard wood piece.
    • i used it to fix my notebook.i dropped it and broke the small plastic pieces of the case that the laptop screen's hinge is screwed
    • Worked for what i needed it for (crappy headphones ear pieces fell off, used the J-B weld for this)- Easy to use, personally I used it for a little
    • It did join the pieces together like a single solid object, but the marketing materials say it "can be shaped, tapped, filed, sanded and drilled after curing".
    • Before putting on the adhesive, I sanded and roughed up the two adjoining pieces and cleaned the area with acetone (nail polish remover).
    • To repair a broken, hollow aluminum tube, fabricate a piece of 2" to 5" of oakwood (or other hard wood) that will slip into both ends of the broken tube section; it should be a tight fit.
    • With EMT shears, I cut suitable pieces from a tin can
    • After all the pieces were epoxied and cured, I sanded it, re-stained it and finished with a sealant
    • It works G-R-E-A-T !
    • It works G-R-E-A-T !