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 | | Re: Glueing old lego
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| (...) Hmm, maybe it has something to do with the fact that it tends to kill your brain cells if not properly filtered/ventilated? :D (...) MEK sets in an hour or less (we found that we could often declamp in about 20min), but I believe Oatey Cement, (...) (22 years ago, 28-Aug-04, to lugnet.general)
| | |  | | Re: If you could wish for new Lego elements......
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| (...) Gary, I'm sure this subject has come up a few times in the past, but it had a recent incarnation in this thread: (URL) think it's a great subject for discussion and wishful thinking. Actually, I think it would make a great contest for the LEGO (...) (22 years ago, 28-Aug-04, to lugnet.general, lugnet.lego, lugnet.parts)
| | |  | | If you could wish for new Lego elements......
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| If you could wish for new Lego elements for TLG to produce, what would they be..... here's my choice: ___...___ 1) a 3x3 low slope inside slope (double concave). This would make it easier to make low sloped roofs in more varieties, like the regular (...) (22 years ago, 28-Aug-04, to lugnet.general, lugnet.lego)
| | |  | | Re: Glueing old lego
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| (...) I don't find any MEK in my neighborhood hardware store. Instead I bought a bottle of methylene chloride from a model shop specifically for mending broken Lego. Doesn't work too good, apparently. But this thing is good enough for closing the (...) (22 years ago, 28-Aug-04, to lugnet.general)
| | |  | | Re: Glueing old lego
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| (...) Yeah the Legoland California Modelshop still uses the MEK/ABS mixture. From what I have heard, all the other modelshops have switched to the new glue. The LEGO company feels MEK is too dangerous for employees to use, but some parks have been (...) (22 years ago, 28-Aug-04, to lugnet.general)
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