I have an axe that I really like but after several years the head is starting to come loose. It's kind of a hybrid axe/maul and I think it weighs 3 lbs.
I've been very happy with the standard JB Weld, but that West System stuff is probably better. I used West System on my ski boat when I gutted the boat down to a hull with stringers and rebuilt everything. 20 years later that's all solid.
Thanks for the replies. The west system epoxy sounds good but unfortunately it seems to cost more than I paid for the axe itself. Maybe its time to go see if I can find another similar axe. Or maybe a wood handle would last longer?
Jb weld. It's cheap and IMHO, anytime that does any of their own repairs should have it in the cabinet. It's under $5.
I have the gorilla glue stuff that seems to work pretty well. I bet any 2 part plastic epoxy will do the job.
I have always had good luck with JB Weld. Once fixed a leak on a copper steam pre heat coil on large supply air fan in one of our buildings. 3 psi of steam pressure on that coil and held up for a long time
I once fixed a coolant tank in a semi truck with jb weld and that was holding 15psi and 200 degrees. Lasted at least a year then the truck was sold. The difference I'm concerned with is the shock and whether it can handle that. Now I'm wondering if I should wait until the head comes off and clean it all up and jb weld it or should I try to get it packed down in there before the existing epoxy is totally gone?
If I was going to do it I would lean more toward taking it apart and clean both sides well before mating them together.
If I were doing it, I wouldn't do it. I think you will quickly find out that no epoxy will take that abuse.
If I were doing it, I would pack that sucker up with the lowest cost epoxy I had on hand. When it finally breaks, I would probably do the same thing again. As long as the product functions safely, i am not worried about semantics. Just get it done.
I got around to attempting a repair today. I warmed both my axe and a sledgehammer with a loose head next to the woodstove. Then I mixed a big batch of epoxy and flooded the tops of both. The epoxy is super cheap from harbor freight. After 24 hours the testing will begin.