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• #110952
dashboard is also some kind of magic slippy plastic
There's your trouble. You really need to identify what kind of plastic and use an appropriate activator to get the glue to stick, e.g. https://www.permabond.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/POP_TDS.pdf for polypropylene. After that, you can use a regular cyanoacrylate super glue; don't us the rubber toughened one, the brittleness of regular will be your friend when you need to pop the accelerometer off the dash.
Glue only half the area of the bottom of the metal cube and use the curvature to your advantage to leave a gap under the non-glued section into which you can insert an ice scraper when it comes time to pry the two apart.
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• #110953
Fantastic. Many many thanks. This confirms my suspicions and gives me an idea of where to go next.
Acetone as a solvent for removing the cyanoacrylate super glue residue from accelerometer and dash afterward?
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• #110954
Acetone should work fine. It may struggle with residue that has been there for a while.
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• #110955
Cheers.
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• #110956
Use proper acetone from the chemist. Not nail polish remover with all the other shite they put in it.
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• #110957
I’d test a bit of acetone on your dash first, it might well fuck it.
I was going to recommend a blob of Evo Stik. Residue will come off with paint thinners. Again, try a bit of thinners on your dash first in case of dash fuckage.
Have you tried carpet tape? That stuff is pretty sticky.
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• #110958
Sound advice.
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• #110959
I was wondering about using a whole bunch of some appropriate tape. The trick is to find one that will stick to the dash material.
I just bought a couple of rolls of tesa 4289 tubeless tape, which itself is polypropylene, so that might work...
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• #110960
What book is this?
(No I don't have a better quality image.)
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• #110961
Servo tape might work. It’s used to stick down actuators in radio control things. Bonkers sticky, shock resistant, very firm bond but can be removed. Give the dashboard a very good clean first, maybe isopropyl (test first somewhere discreet)
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• #110962
Have you tried one of these sticky pads? They look useless but it's actually bonkers how sticky they are, but leave no residue when you pull them off.
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• #110963
leave no residue when you pull them off.
This will be a quote from Prince Andrew if he ever gets to court.
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• #110964
Source?
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• #110965
This will be a quote about Prince Andrew
...if it turns out that sweat isn't the only bodily fluid he doesn't excrete.
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• #110966
I reckon he excretes a few extra if anything.
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• #110967
Google "anti slip dashboard mat" or any of your preferred synonyms
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• #110968
I prefer dude/didum.
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• #110969
You’ve been on point this week didum.
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• #110970
Thanks! I've spent enough time looking, to no avail, now I need to know too.
What's the source of your image? -
• #110972
Could the mystery book be this?
https://www.waterstones.com/book/american-spy/lauren-wilkinson/9780349700984
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• #110973
Yep! Well done. I can carry on with my day now.
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• #110974
Amazing. Thank you!
What did you (and others do) to search for it?
I was doing an image search for "yellow book cover" and "yellow book cover red figure" amongst other things.
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• #110975
Thanks! I've spent enough time looking, to no avail, now I need to know too.
What's the source of your image?A woman in the crowd celebrating at the end of the West Ham game.
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What's a really strong, stiff adhesive that comes off with known and readily available solvent?
The situation is I need to mount an accelerometer to the dashboard of my car. It is a metal cube of about 20mm on each edge. It's pretty heavy for its size.
So far I have tried: adhesive velcro; Bostik sticky dots; double-sided adhesive tape; and adhesive foam.
The foam worked best but wasn't sticky enough. What was good about it was that it had some thickness and compressibility, which meant that it filled the gaps nicely between slightly curved dashboard and flat base of sensor.
The dashboard is also some kind of magic slippy plastic material.
Help?!