OEM Manufacturer Siway SV-602 Epoxy Structural Adhesive A/B Wholesale to Iran
Short Description:
Description SV-602 is a 2-part structural epoxy adhesive developed for such application as dry fixing cladding. It has strong adhesion to metals, woods, reinforced plastics stone, ceramic and masonry. It is the best choice for bonding parts which must withstand weather, moisture and temperature fluctuations. SV-602 will adhere with minimum surface preparation and has a low coefficient of expansion. Key Features 1. Room temperature curing Epoxy adhesive 2. Fast cure at room temperature,...
With our excellent management, strong technical capability and strict quality control system, we continue to provide our clients with reliable quality, reasonable prices and excellent services. We aim at becoming one of your most reliable partners and earning your satisfaction for OEM Manufacturer Siway SV-602 Epoxy Structural Adhesive A/B Wholesale to Iran, We also ensure that your selection will be crafted with the highest quality and reliability. Please feel free to contact us for further information.
Description
SV-602 is a 2-part structural epoxy adhesive developed for such application as dry fixing cladding. It has strong adhesion to metals, woods, reinforced plastics stone, ceramic and masonry. It is the best choice for bonding parts which must withstand weather, moisture and temperature fluctuations. SV-602 will adhere with minimum surface preparation and has a low coefficient of expansion.
Key Features
1. Room temperature curing Epoxy adhesive
2. Fast cure at room temperature, <40 min for reaching a tack-free status under standard environment (STD: 23℃, 50% humidity)
3. Mix ratio of 1:1 by volume or by weight
4. Good mechanical property
5. Bonds a wide variety of building materials
6. Good waterproofing and chemical resistance
Basic Application
1, the external walls of stone material, ceramic and other hang bond;
2, concrete, ceramics, stone, wood and other prefabricated split, bonding and jointing;
3, concrete, stone and so on crack repair;
4, the structure of the localization, anchor, reinforcement and reinforcement.
Technical data sheet
The following data is for reference only and is not recommended for the specification
Shear strength | Stainless steel-stainless steel/Standard conditions | ≥18 | JC887-2001 | ||
Pressure shear strength | Stone-stone/ Standard conditions | ≥12 | |||
Stone-stone/ The freeze-thaw cycle 50 times | ≥10 | ||||
Stone – stainless steel/ Standard conditions | ≥12 | ||||
Standard conditions:Temperature=23℃,relative humidity=50%,48 hours curing | |||||
attribute | SV-602-A | SV-602-B | SV-602(After mixing) | ||
Colour | gray | white | grey | ||
Density(g/cm³) | 1.8 | 1.8 | 1.8 | ||
Viscosity(PaS) | 200-400 | 150-250 | |||
Effective operating time(23℃) | N/A | N/A | 20min | ||
Certification
JC 887-2001
Color
Part A-Grey Paste/Part B-White Paste
Package
9kg/9kg per unit and 15kg/15kg per unit
Shelf life
12 months
Note
If you want the TDS or MSDS or other details, please contact with our sales person.
Hope it can bring you a wonderful experience.
Check out here for more information: https://amzn.to/2snlBst
Over time I’ve been noticing small cracks appearing on my Keystone Cougar fifth wheel trailers plastic fenders. The cracking is taking place around the screws holding the fenders to the trailer sidewall. It started off with one or two but is slowly progressing to more and more every year. If this kept up and left unchecked, I fear one day I’d lose a fender during travel.
So, I decided this summer to pull the fenders off and see what could be done to beef them up, stop the cracking and prevent a full on failure. A reader recently contacted me via email with some insight to the problem. He believes the cracking might be caused by the indented area for the screws not being flush with the backside.
Ray,
At the end of your shelf repair video, you showed a shot of the cracks around the mounting screws for the fenders.
I just removed the fenders from my trailer so I could caulk the steel wheel tubs to the side of the trailer.
Upon reinstallation of the plastic fenders, I noticed that the indents for the screws are not flush with the back side.
If you over tighten the screws it is going to crack the plastic.
There is room enough to put a washer between the fender and the sidewall.
You might be able to epoxy a washer on the back side to reinforce the plastic.
I enjoy your videos.
Arthur
I elected to take Arthur’s advice and use some washers on the back side of the fender behind the screw holes. Instead of using epoxy I chose to use SikaFlex 291 sealant. I embedded the washer into the Sikaflex and then applied a healthy layer of it all around the indented plastic area. On the front side of the fender behind each screw, I added a small rubber grommet.
Time will tell but I believe the repair and modifications made should help extend the life of my fenders and at least prevent a catastrophic failure at speed on a highway. If not, thanks to thunderbird97 on YouTube for pointing me to a website to order up a replacement set.
“thunderbird97 - Ray here is a website I ordered my fender skirts in case you need it, https://www.icondirect.com , the only difference was old ones were thicker, new ones are made out of better material, holes matched up perfect. Here is the Canada site www.icondirect.ca”
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