Best adhesive for glue in anchors
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Hey all, |
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Technically (for Euro bolts to EN959) you are supposed to use the glue supplied or recommended by the manufacturer. However they all get the standard with either vinylester or epoxyacrylate so these will do, the epoxyacrylates being the better of the two types. The pure epoxies are much more expensive and have a few (more) health issues and are very slow curing. I don´t know any manufacturers who recommend its use. |
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Installing glue in bolts is not rocket science, but you should get a lesson from someone with some experience. There are some good tips above, but everyone has their own system. |
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Whatever you do, don't use the Hilti cartridges you insert into the bolt hole and try to mix by simply turning the bolt a few times. This does not adequately mix the epoxy. In fact, this glue cartridge is supposed to be mixed by a threaded rod inserted into the drill and not by hand. |
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There are capsules which require spinning to harden (they use the friction of the particles in them to produce the heat to cure)and there are ones which merely need the bolt driving through to mix the components. In testing they give the strongest bolt but in reality they are not to be recommended since the quantities are rarely correct for the hole and the resin tends to run out of the hole. We don´t use them. |
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redhead a7 and sika anchor fix in single caulk tubes is what I get, I havent paid more than 20 bucks a tube online and at the big box hardware stores. the double tube guns are a thing of the past, I have one sitting in the basement. |
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I've been using the Red Head A7 as well. (Jim - any tests done on this?) I've found the single caulk tubes for $14 and nozzles for $1.30. Pretty good. The A7 dries to a nice subtle grey color which is nice and low profile. That Hilti stuff is often the nastiest of RED colors. Not great for limestone. |
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I take my hat off to you guys. Glue is a pain in the ass. But in some rock it is the only way to go. Sounds like the process goes better once you have a system. Thanks for all the hard work. |
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wave bolts seem like a good idea, for the cost especially, if they are the real deal. EB in WI or MN? Did you get some access to a previous area or find something new? |
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I posted this on RC.com a while back: Wavebolt got a bit "enthusiastic" claiming their design was far superior to anything else out there which I felt, as JohnL points out, is a bit disingenuous considering how long Jim's bolts have been out. T to B: Hilti HSL, Powers 5 Piece 1/2in x 3.75, Hilti KB3 3/8x3.75in, Hilti KB3 1/2x5.5in, Wave Bolt 1/2 x 4in, Titt Bolt 12x100mm, Titt 12x150mm, Titt 16x150mm |
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I've drilled out the mixing nozzles on A7 tubes and mixed with the Titt bolts as I push them in and they tested out almost identical to the ones glued with an intact mixing nozzle. An open nozzle paired with an old coat hanger to clean it out after each use means less rush, especially when you are only bolting anchors on gear lines, or bolting ground up ascents. I'm sure I'm going catch some flack for posting this, but that's just my 2 cents. |
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Mitchell Allen wrote:I've drilled out the mixing nozzles on A7 tubes and mixed with the Titt bolts as I push them in and they tested out almost identical to the ones glued with an intact mixing nozzle. An open nozzle paired with an old coat hanger to clean it out after each use means less rush, especially when you are only bolting anchors on gear lines, or bolting ground up ascents. I'm sure I'm going catch some flack for posting this, but that's just my 2 cents."almost" is the kicker here for me, I guess if its vertical or less than vert and the holes are drilled at a good angle its fine but mixing tubes are cheap |
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Mitchell Allen wrote:I've drilled out the mixing nozzles on A7 tubes and mixed with the Titt bolts as I push them in and they tested out almost identical to the ones glued with an intact mixing nozzle. An open nozzle paired with an old coat hanger to clean it out after each use means less rush, especially when you are only bolting anchors on gear lines, or bolting ground up ascents. I'm sure I'm going catch some flack for posting this, but that's just my 2 cents.It´s o.k. We do it as well when we are running short. In fact we were testing some (made in the US) glue in conjunction with the British Cavers Association and they got dissapointing results in their pull tests which matched the results we got. We re-tested mixing the glue by hand and identified the problem was with the nozzles which were being supplied. The nozzles vary and my glue supplier will sell ETA ones and non-ETA ones (the Euro Technical Approval for the glue system. The short ones with less mixing elements are the non-approved ones as a generality. Cutting a tube open and mixing the contents by hand was the most reliable by far compared with the mixing nozzles. That said, the difference between not performing as well as expected and the normal results was the difference between 49kN and 58kN which is fundamentally irrelevant, just technically interesting (for us at least)! |
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TR purist wrote: "almost" is the kicker here for me, I guess if its vertical or less than vert and the holes are drilled at a good angle its fine but mixing tubes are cheapLike Jim said, almost identical is comparing differences like 50kN and 55kN. With that much force, I guarantee something else is breaking first. You're only as strong as your weakest link, and anything hovering around 10,000 lbf is NOT my weakest link. Mitchell |
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Mitchell Allen wrote: Like Jim said, almost identical is comparing differences like 50kN and 55kN. With that much force, I guarantee something else is breaking first. You're only as strong as your weakest link, and anything hovering around 10,000 lbf is NOT my weakest link. MitchellMaking something weaker to speed things up/make life cheaper is not my style I guess. Introducing pockets of air by solely mixing in the hole is what happens and I have to assume its quite messy as well. Plus those Titt bolts with the twist could easily trap a high percentage hardener in the twist. The last time I had to put an anchor in with A7/Sika(cant remember) was a big old stainless eye bolt about a foot above the high tide line for a dock to tie up to. I had no new mixing tubes so I mixed in the 5/8" hole and thought I had done a pretty damn good job, the color was right and the next day it seemed bomber. A week later the tide came up with a storm and covered it for a couple hours, the next day it had softened up and came right out with ease. I have to blame it on the mix not being right. If it had mixed in the tube AND the hole(which I always do a little of) this probably would have been bomber. I'll save the shortcuts for bushwhacking, call me cautious! |
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JB Weld has worked pretty well for me! I just load it up into a caulking gun. |
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Has anyone used Hilti HIT-HY 70 adhesive for glue-ins? |
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Why are you even considering it? Are you bolting something to a brick/block wall? |
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John Byrnes wrote:Why are you even considering it? Are you bolting something to a brick/block wall?There is no Hilti glue that specifically says for rock climbing anchors. Yet lots of people use Hilti glue. According to Hilti it is for use with hollow base, OR SOLID, and grouted concrete. Have you ever used glue-ins? What do you use? Hilti HIT-HY 70 Hybrid Adhesive is a dependable solution for anyone needing to anchoring rebar and threaded rod into hollow base materials such as masonry, or solid and grouted concrete. Even in near freezing temperatures, this hybrid adhesive dispenses quickly and easily. Get started on your anchoring into masonry project quickly and reliably with Hilti HIT-HY 70 Hybrid Adhesives. Suited to solve multi-wythe anchoring problems in renovation and seismic upgrades of unreinforced masonry buildings Reliable performance even when size and location of voids are unknown, or brick and mortar are inconsistent Listings and approvals include: international code council ESR for hollow masonry, grouted masonry and red clay brick (pending); ESR for URM - ESR 3342; City of Los Angeles RR-25947 for URM |
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Brian wrote: Why are you even considering it? Are you bolting something to a brick/block wall? There is no Hilti glue that specifically says for rock climbing anchors. Yet lots of people use Hilti glue. According to Hilti it is for use with hollow base, OR SOLID, and grouted concrete. Have you ever used glue-ins? What do you use? Hilti HIT-HY 70 Hybrid Adhesive is a dependable solution for anyone needing to anchoring rebar and threaded rod into hollow base materials such as masonry, or solid and grouted concrete. Even in near freezing temperatures, this hybrid adhesive dispenses quickly and easily. Get started on your anchoring into masonry project quickly and reliably with Hilti HIT-HY 70 Hybrid Adhesives. Suited to solve multi-wythe anchoring problems in renovation and seismic upgrades of unreinforced masonry buildings Reliable performance even when size and location of voids are unknown, or brick and mortar are inconsistent Listings and approvals include: international code council ESR for hollow masonry, grouted masonry and red clay brick (pending); ESR for URM - ESR 3342; City of Los Angeles RR-25947 for URM If you are using Hilti Glues, use the HY200. Don't use glues like the HY70 made of polyester. Those glues have a weak performance in stones and are much influenced by dusts or bad cleaning of the hole. Obviously, there is not only Hilti, we are selling similar glue under the name of AC100Pro (hybrid vynilester) and have add excellent results in various tests on stones. Sometimes, depending on the stones, we have even had higher results than in concrete. You should be able to find in your local fastener distributor similar glues. Besides that, another interesting option to fix in stones is the technology of the concrete screw, like the HUS 3 of Hilti, or the Powers Wedge Bolt (known as Blue-Tip Screwbolt in Europe) and similars screws from various distributors. At various tests we have done, those were showing excellent behaviors, much better than the classic wedge anchors like the HST 3 of Hilti. And even, if you speak about seismic behavior, the concrete screw are performing better than the other mechanical anchors. |
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Just go old school and use elmer's glue. |