I am curious whether this would have happened if the parts had been edged with a glue pot edgebander or not?Īll experiential knowledge is valuable, and it will be useful to me in this situation. It seems the extreme drying was the culprit. All of the Fastcap had begun to delaminate whether it had gotten wet or not. They dried it for two weeks with dehumidifiers and fans. A side note here, I recently went back to a job where if first tried the Fastcap edging and there had been a broken tub valve on the second story that flooded the kitchen below. I always use solid or frame and panel doors and drawers. I have never used it on doors or drawer fronts, only on cabinet parts that are hidden behind the doors and drawers. To contributor T: Just wondering how often if at all you have used the Edgemate on doors and drawer fronts? Would you use it on light use commercial cabinets? So far I have not had any call backs on it. I can put a lot more pressure on the banding which in turn makes it stick better. I use a veneer scraper to put it on rather than a roller. The Edgemate is a superior product and comes in many species. I have used the Fastcap edgebanding and then switched to Edgemate peel and stick with 3M adhesive. Otherwise it seems like a guaranteed call back in a short while. This seems to stop the creeping and makes it stick twice as well. When we use it for susan boxes and such I have the guys brush contact cement on the particle board edge. The Fastcap tape doesn't stick well enough to suit me. Whenever I'm doing custom melamine closets I have a roll or two with me and wouldn't be caught without it. If something is going to see wear try to stick with the edgebander. It's kind of a use your best judgment type of thing. One of those odd tools worth every penny! Now you don't want to use the stuff where it's going to see a lot of wear, like shelf or door edges. I also use it with their cap making kit to make matching caps to cover screws. It sticks pretty well and is easy to apply following their directions. Having the Fastcap tape to be able to band on site is a great tool. Sometimes it's a cut-to-fit part or assembly, and sometimes it's something that's getting changed in progress. For me it's often when I need to band a part on site. However, if you’re doing PVC banding using an iron is out, and there are times when you can't use the bander. I try to do most of my banding on my HolzHer as well, but there's always an oddball piece here and there that’s easier to iron on. I see FastCap makes a stick on banding, I was curious how well it works? Has anyone here tried it, or currently use it? I have a Brandt edgebander that I use for most of my edgebanding, but I do use an iron-on tape for odds and ends.
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