I agree with this. Epoxy is great for gluing live rock together or larger items due to its superior holding strength, but the curing process is exothermic and the last thing you want to do, especially with a small frag, is bake half your coral before it has a chance to flourish.jefftullius;61059 wrote: I find the epoxy tends to burn the coral where it touches the corals.
Linda Lee;61062 wrote: Sure wouldn't recommend the gray putty (or whatever it is) that's sold @ Cap Bay. Have found that it does absolutely nothing.
mojo;61211 wrote: It's great if you know the application it's intended for - holding a specific shape. You can't use it to "stick" to things together, but rather to take the mold of whatever you squeeze it into. For example, if you have a plug that you want to go on a certain rock, make a ball of the grey expoxy and put it in that position. Push the plug down into the epoxy, then form the epoxy around the base of the plug and onto the rock, so that it fills as many gaps as possible. After 1-2 hours, it'll setup rock hard.
Think of it as 'moldable rock' rather than a 'glue'. Just form the rock so that it holds things where you want them and give it some time.
FutureInterest;61202 wrote: The good thing about epoxy is that you can more easily mold it to hold that oddly shaped frag onto the rock. Here's a trick for using epoxy effectively that has worked for me...
Use crazy glue and epoxy together. The crazy glue will hold the coral and epoxy in place until the epoxy cures. As such, work your epoxy into a lil ball and put a large dab of glue on it, then attach your coral to the ball via the glue. Then put another large dab on the other side of the ball and smush the entire ball/coral/glue onto the rock you want it to attach to. Press and mold the epoxy and you're good to go.
Linda Lee;61062 wrote: Sure wouldn't recommend the gray putty (or whatever it is) that's sold @ Cap Bay. Have found that it does absolutely nothing.
Dakota9;61731 wrote: SJ Miller, that statment makes a lot of sense to me, being that most all 2 part epoxys I've used (including paint!) in the past requires a rest period between mixing and using, I'm going to try that next, I was just concerned my first time that it would set up before I was ready.
Rep points for you!