withstands up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit? It sounds too good to be true...
http://www.autozone.com/sealants-glues-adhesives-and-tape/epoxy-compound/blue-magic-qs-high-temperature-metal-repair-trilingual/515553_0_0/#close
Quote from: Foster Dahlet on January 12, 2017, 09:57:53 PM
withstands up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit? It sounds too good to be true...
http://www.autozone.com/sealants-glues-adhesives-and-tape/epoxy-compound/blue-magic-qs-high-temperature-metal-repair-trilingual/515553_0_0/#close
I looked up the MSDS: http://bluemagicusa.com/bm_files/msds/QuikSteel%20Putty%20MSDS.pdf and the main ingredient is "Hydrous magnesium silicate" aka talc
From Wikipedia:
"Talc is widely used in the ceramics industry in both bodies and glazes. In low-fire art-ware bodies, it imparts whiteness and increases thermal expansion to resist crazing. In stonewares, small percentages of talc are used to flux the body and therefore improve strength and vitrification. It is a source of MgO flux in high-temperature glazes (to control melting temperature). It is also employed as a matting agent in earthenware glazes and can be used to produce magnesia mattes at high temperatures."
Withstands up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit may be true but those conditions are not necessarily in real world use.
Quote from: pbe gummi bear on January 12, 2017, 10:50:17 PM
Quote from: Foster Dahlet on January 12, 2017, 09:57:53 PM
withstands up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit? It sounds too good to be true...
http://www.autozone.com/sealants-glues-adhesives-and-tape/epoxy-compound/blue-magic-qs-high-temperature-metal-repair-trilingual/515553_0_0/#close
I looked up the MSDS: http://bluemagicusa.com/bm_files/msds/QuikSteel%20Putty%20MSDS.pdf and the main ingredient is "Hydrous magnesium silicate" aka talc
From Wikipedia:
"Talc is widely used in the ceramics industry in both bodies and glazes. In low-fire art-ware bodies, it imparts whiteness and increases thermal expansion to resist crazing. In stonewares, small percentages of talc are used to flux the body and therefore improve strength and vitrification. It is a source of MgO flux in high-temperature glazes (to control melting temperature). It is also employed as a matting agent in earthenware glazes and can be used to produce magnesia mattes at high temperatures."
Withstands up to 2400 degrees Fahrenheit may be true but those conditions are not necessarily in real world use.
Is the putty you cited different from the epoxy compound? I know they sell a putty too, which is this stuff.
http://www.autozone.com/sealants-glues-adhesives-and-tape/epoxy-compound/blue-magic-quiksteel-epoxy-putty/515416_0_0?checkfit=true
Here are the two side by side:
http://www.autozone.com/sealants-glues-adhesives-and-tape/epoxy-compound?filters=4294962688
Looks like a repackaged or cloned JB Weld product.
Same specs.
I know for a fact you can drill and tap JB Weld.
Used it to fix the cutter mount on a brake lathe
while we waited for a replacement to arrive.
It worked for over a year before we bothered to swap
for the new part.
http://www.jbweld.com/collections/metal/products/j-b-extremeheat
Quote from: YardBurner on January 13, 2017, 07:30:15 AM
Looks like a repackaged or cloned JB Weld product.
Same specs.
I know for a fact you can drill and tap JB Weld.
Used it to fix the cutter mount on a brake lathe
while we waited for a replacement to arrive.
It worked for over a year before we bothered to swap
for the new part.
http://www.jbweld.com/collections/metal/products/j-b-extremeheat
Thank you, Yard Burner. I was looking for JB Weld product and my search turned up the Blue Magic stuff. Good to know it has the same specs.
Yes I have heard of it and yes I have used it. Works flawlessly...on a muffler. I was grabbing the tail pipe when I was removing my engine from my bug for the 6th time and snapped the housing off. I welded the thing back together but it still sounded like a flipping bottle rocket going down the street. I saw this and figured, hell I have nothing to lose. It's still on the muffler...at my neighbors house after 2 years. Sold him the muffler and engine, not the car.
Sent from my iPad using Weber Kettle Club mobile app (https://siteowners.tapatalk.com/byo/displayAndDownloadByoApp?rid=91018)
Quote from: Vwbuggin64 on January 13, 2017, 08:35:03 PM
Yes I have heard of it and yes I have used it. Works flawlessly...on a muffler. I was grabbing the tail pipe when I was removing my engine from my bug for the 6th time and snapped the housing off. I welded the thing back together but it still sounded like a flipping bottle rocket going down the street. I saw this and figured, hell I have nothing to lose. It's still on the muffler...at my neighbors house after 2 years. Sold him the muffler and engine, not the car.
Sent from my iPad using Weber Kettle Club mobile app (https://siteowners.tapatalk.com/byo/displayAndDownloadByoApp?rid=91018)
Excellent, thank you. Do you think it would work inside a kettle bowl? I can plug 3 small holes, less than 1/8 inch in each hole with a screw or with the epoxy. Or will this epoxy wilt in the heat? The screws will work, but I almost want to try the epoxy for the sake of experimentation.
@Vwbuggin64
Funny...I used jb weld to patch a hole I put in my old new beetle engine block. Still holding 5 years later.
Only thing I worry about is if it's "officially" food safe....
I guess your food doesn't touch it. You don't really eat your coals either, but you ingest a lot of particulate stuff as the burn.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: blksabbath on January 14, 2017, 07:03:03 AM
@Vwbuggin64
Funny...I used jb weld to patch a hole I put in my old new beetle engine block. Still holding 5 years later.
Only thing I worry about is if it's "officially" food safe....
I guess your food doesn't touch it. You don't really eat your coals either, but you ingest a lot of particulate stuff as the burn.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I decided against using it to plug the holes. I used small screws instead. Faster and less complex.
Quote from: blksabbath on January 14, 2017, 07:03:03 AM
Only thing I worry about is if it's "officially" food safe....
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Is the enamel officially food safe, is the nickel plating on a grate officially food safe, is the charcoal particulate officially food safe?
Sorry busy day today. Should be fine. Id hit it with hi-temp paint, but i live dangerously
Sent from my iPhone using Weber Kettle Club mobile app (https://siteowners.tapatalk.com/byo/displayAndDownloadByoApp?rid=91018)
Quote from: Darko on January 14, 2017, 03:46:09 PM
Quote from: blksabbath on January 14, 2017, 07:03:03 AM
Only thing I worry about is if it's "officially" food safe....
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Is the enamel officially food safe, is the nickel plating on a grate officially food safe, is the charcoal particulate officially food safe?
Just throwing the "officially" comment out there. I know exactly what you are saying.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: blksabbath on January 14, 2017, 07:03:03 AM
@Vwbuggin64
Funny...I used jb weld to patch a hole I put in my old new beetle engine block. Still holding 5 years later.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Many things were JB welded on my old bug before I got rid of it.
Sent from my iPad using Weber Kettle Club mobile app (https://siteowners.tapatalk.com/byo/displayAndDownloadByoApp?rid=91018)