Excellent old school smithing staple
Used this for years in our shop for most everything needing bedding, repair and even general epoxy fix’s. Wish the flock were still available.
Pro-grade resin and hardening agent.
Absolutely, the best
Recommended to me by Mark Novak - couldn't be happier with how this worked for me.
Best I've seen.
Aviation background, part time knife maker and amateur gunsmith. This is the best I've ever worked with when quality counts. Having tried others, I would even give some a '4' , this is an outstanding '5' .! Good people to work with when I had a few questions years ago.
Acraglass Liquid
I have used Acraglass Liquid for over 40 years as an adhesive to repair cracked gun stocks as well as many other household repairs - it works - I prefer the Liquid be as it flows into small spaces -
Since 1960
Beginning in 1960 I originally used AcraGlas for Glass bedding and repairs. After Acraglas Gel came along I used it for repairs. I never had a failure in 49 years of gunsmithing and now I am retired and woodworking as an amateur. I use it as the adhesive of last resort. Mostly on less than perfect joints.
You can heat crystallized resin
I've bought this kit several times over the years. People need to be aware that if the resin gets cold it can start to crystallize. Once this starts it will continue to crystallize even at normal temperatures. THIS DOES NOT MEAN IT HAS GONE BAD! You simply need to heat the bottle in hot water to melt the crystal and it returns to normal. The shelf life on this product is many many years. I use this epoxy in a machine shop to refurbish vacuum fixtures, to laminate phenolic, wood and G10 sheet, and to bond knife scales to the tang in knife production. Get the mixing ratios exactly right and mix for four minutes and you have the strongest most durable bond I've ever found. I even bedded a rifle with it once.
I repair antique furniture works great
furniture will break be for the resin lets go.
One of Brownells finest
I've used Acraglas since I bought it in the mid 70s to bed an early M1A. Since then I always seem to find uses for it from laminating wood, to repairing and strengthening wood in place of carpenters glue and repairing old neglected wood. I always keep the big containers around since I always find new ways of using it. Versatile, strong, durable. I can't say anything bad about the product other than read the instructions! They help with this one.
A great and versatile product
I use Acraglas for a number of things dating back to the mid 70s when I first bedded an early M1A. I use it to laminate wood, repair wood, fix screws that have stripped out of wood. It's probably one of the most versatile and durable epoxy compounds around. At the moment I've using it to fix a friend's porch where the wood was neglected for years. It's saving him a rebuild and does really nicely adding strength to the wood. I always keep these two large containers of Acralgas around.
Not just your Dad's bedding compound.
Acraglas is the shops go to fix all. It's already known as a superior bedding compound, so if you are doing more than one gun to even a few guns, you may consider getting this quantity of Acraglas and hardener. If it's a slow go and you don't do too many at first and the contents glaze over, a simple quick touch in the microwave and you're good to go with all of the liquid ready to pour so it has a very long shelf life. Not only good for action bedding, it's great for putting parts together and for making all sorts of jigs like a frame jig for your action wrench and to lock on a homemade tool into a handle. Ever had a file slip from its handle? Grind a couple of notches into the handle portion of the file and fill the handle with Acraglas prior to inserting the file. Let harden overnight and in the morning the file is there to stay in its handle without the slightest chance of slipping for the life of the file or handle. Same for Lee Mold handles. Works like a champ. No shop should be without it. Smithy.