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I accidentally glued a board to the inside of a shell.

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Accidentally isn't really the word.

I found a Slingy Cloud Badge Parade snare in the trash. The seam on the inside had a few small cracks, less than half an inch and it was starting to peel up just a wee bit. I used some wood glue and filled in underneath it, and wipes away the excess clamped a shim (not the right word) down onto the seam. Next, I took it off, wiped everything down again and reclamped. I waited a day or two, unclamped and my shin is now firmly attached.

Any thoughts?

Thanks,

Jake

Posted on 10 years ago
#1
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I hate to play Capt. Hindsight, but maybe you should have backed the brace off of the seam by a 1/16th or so. Now what you're left with is the hot compress treatment. Carpenters glue will soften up if you put hot towels on it and leave it on until the glue does soften. Be patient and don't worry. All is not lost.

Hot water/towel compresses until glue softens. It'll come off.

Hope this helps.

John

Too many great drums to list here!

http://www.walbergandauge.com/VintageVenue.htm
Posted on 10 years ago
#2
Posts: 1525 Threads: 127
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Ohhh no. You should have put some plastic sandwich wrap between the shim and the shell. Guess you have a extra piece of wood inside your drum. Maybe you can dislodge it with a exacto knife or something. But that wood glue is strong. DOH. Try Johns idea.

Posted on 10 years ago
#3
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Wood glue? I thought we were talking Elmer's yellow carpenters glue. If you used a strong wood glue, that shim just became part of the drum. Or, you can try to cut it off like Vibes said.

John

Too many great drums to list here!

http://www.walbergandauge.com/VintageVenue.htm
Posted on 10 years ago
#4
Posts: 3467 Threads: 116
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If it is a PVA wood glue, some people have had success with white vinegar, take a google search on " PVA glue vinegar ".. you'll get some hits.

Cheers

'77 Slingerland 51N,Super Rock 24,18,14,13.. COW 8,10 Concert toms
'69 Slingerland Hollywood Ace
'75 Rogers Dynasonic 6.5 x 14, 10 lug COB
'77-78 Slingerland 6.5 x 14, 10 lug COB
'78-79 Slingerland 5 1/4 x14 8 lug COB
'79 Biman 5 1/4, Acrolite
'82 Slingerland 5 1/4 x 14. Festival COS
'84 Tama MasterCraft Superstar 6.5 x 14, 10 lug Rosewood
'98 Slingerland (Music YO) 6" 10 Lug Maple.. NOS
Zildjian, Sabian , UFIP & Paiste mix.
Posted on 10 years ago
#5
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Try John's idea to soften the glue. Also look up using steam. The good thing is the glue is not that old. I've removed 40+ year old glued re-rings with a wallpaper steamer. Just be careful and if it starts to get too wet, clean up the water and stop with the steam. Once the glue gets soft, carefully use a putty knife to get between the board and the shell. Good luck.

-Tim

Posted on 10 years ago
#6
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Hey man, it could have been worse... much, much worse!

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20026529-10391704.html

John

Too many great drums to list here!

http://www.walbergandauge.com/VintageVenue.htm
Posted on 10 years ago
#7
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I would find whatever tool, or combination of tools, that will work to remove the shim. Mini-hand planer, chisel, rasp, dremel, die-grinder with a gnarly tip, forstner bit on a drill with a LIGHT touch, There is something on my workbench (and yours tooflower) that would remove a shim glued to another piece of wood........

The guys opinions are valid and not for me to critique, but for me personally, I never purposely introduce water to vintage wooden things......... I find some other way to arrive at the same result, pretty much.

Toodles

Drumhack Sailing2Mallet Player2Burger KinBurger Kin

"If it doesn't matter who wins or loses then why the hell do they keep score Peg? - Al Bundy
Posted on 10 years ago
#8
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I am with drumhack here 100%, no water, no steam. Steaming can make other glued joints come apart, I know from experience. You just need to start carving away the board (or shim or whatever is glued to the shell) with a sharp chisel until you get to the glue, then sand it the rest of the way, bazinga!


Thank you!
Jeff C

"Enjoy every sandwich" Warren Zevon
Posted on 10 years ago
#9
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Good point Drumhack and JCcabinets. We wouldn't want the shell plys to start separating.

Could you post some pictures, Jake? Maybe this will help generate some ideas.

-Tim

Posted on 10 years ago
#10
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