FNaF Nightmare Freddy Minecraft Creeper Bondic 5 Second Fix Toy Repair ─ leokimvideo

My FnAF Nightmare Freddy Funko Articulated Figure froze a leg ball joint and it snapped. This exposed to me the toy design that Funko used and how it can fail. This breakage actually happened in a toy review while I was showing the toy to camera. This style of breakage is very difficult to fix. I would normally use an epoxy glue but this time I use a UV setting photopolymer plastic called BONDIC that is set off after being exposed to UV light. BONDIC is the original product, 5 Second Fix is another product that's a copy of BONDIC. This is the first time I have used this style of product and for me it has produced some fantastic results. I also finally fixed the Minecraft Vinyl Creeper that had a broken leg and the FnAF Endoskeleton Freddy. Seeing how these expensive toys break lets you see the design flaws that seems to be ever present in the collectable style toys of today.

Bondic - Training Video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=McG-e...

BondicŽ is the only product that works where glue fails. It’s liquid plastic that only hardens when you need it to. YES it stays liquid and won’t dry out like those crazy glues on the market today. BondicŽ is a very simple 4-step process (clean, fill, cure and shape) to fix almost anything, saving countless precious items from ending up in the trash before their time.

A photopolymer or light-activated resin is a polymer that changes its properties when exposed to light, often in the ultraviolet or visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum. These changes are often manifested structurally, for example hardening of the material occurs as a result of cross-linking when exposed to light. An example is shown below depicting a mixture of monomers, oligomers, and photoinitiators that conform into a hardened polymeric material through a process called curing. A wide variety of technologically useful applications rely on photopolymers, for example some enamels and varnishes depend on photopolymer formulation for proper hardening upon exposure to light. In some instances, an enamel can cure in a fraction of a second when exposed to light, as opposed to thermally cured enamels which can require half an hour or longer. Curable materials are widely used for medical, printing, and photoresist technologies.

Web Links :

https://notaglue.com/
http://www.5secondfix.com/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photopo...


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