T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2841.1 | | LEDS::BURATI | lay back and dream on a rainy day | Tue Oct 26 1993 10:33 | 5 |
| I've always used Elmers white glue or maybe Elmers [yellow] Carpenters
glue for glueing tolex back down. It's very effective. Where the pieces
were good fits, you can't tell where I've made repairs.
--Ron
|
2841.2 | | MANTHN::EDD | Look out fellas, it's shredding time... | Tue Oct 26 1993 10:34 | 10 |
| You can buy vinyl repair kits in the automotive dept. of most stores.
The kits consist of 6-8 vials of goop that you mix together to the
proper color. Smear the goop into the crack, then you use an iron and
some small pieces of material to simulate the texture. A little Armor-
All and you're all set...
Your application should respond real well.
Edd
|
2841.3 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Did it. Done it. *WHAP* owwww! | Tue Oct 26 1993 12:05 | 4 |
| I always used contact cement to glue mine back down, seemed to work
fine...
Greg
|
2841.4 | | TALOFA::HARMON | Paul Harmon, DECtp/East | Tue Oct 26 1993 12:59 | 5 |
| I used one of those vinyl repair kits on a speaker cabinet a long time
ago. It worked just fine (you could barely tell any repair had
happened unless you really looked for it).
Paul
|
2841.5 | think they'll buy it? | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WannaJam? | Tue Oct 26 1993 13:16 | 4 |
| I use silver duct tape.....for that 'road worn' look....."Yeah man, I
used that cab for the '78 *and* '79 world tour".....
8)
|
2841.6 | | GOES11::HOUSE | Did it. Done it. *WHAP* owwww! | Tue Oct 26 1993 14:36 | 5 |
| Actually, I kind of like that road-worn look, with pieces of Tolex
flappin in the breeze generated by the speakers and stuff. My 4x12 cab
is definitely a good example of this.
gh
|
2841.7 | | KDX200::COOPER | Testing my new personal name | Tue Oct 26 1993 16:13 | 5 |
| I can vouch for that...
:-)
jc (Who also has a 1960A which looks like it was drug to most gigs,
but still sounds cool... :-)
|