can apply tremendous force. Locking pliers are sold in several designs (with long nose, flat-jawed, and even C-clamp jaws), but the standard design has serrated, straight jaws. A pair in the eight- to ten-inch long range will have
make a wide kerf.....this is a handle to steady the cap....... When you squeeze the board with a C-clamp the hole gets smaller ........grabbing the smooth cap without distortion.......
You will have door catching problems until this is completely replaced. You can do this for a band aid: Get a large Cclamp and force the broken frame back together as tight as you can. Then pre drill several holes in the broken part as to screw
This is like a bandsaw that uses a hacksaw blade being held by a device that looks like a large c-clamp,which is attached to a pivoting arm that is then attached to a cam wheel and works the blade back and forth to cut through stock
and it is not a good one - is to glue and clamp it. I would use carpenter's yellow glue and clamp it tightly with a C-clamp. There are special screws that are made to hold better in such materials. Those I have seen have a double thread
It seems to me a rotto zip would work if it didn't create meltdown then an the idea of an old iron bed rail used to C-clamp the plexi to a table or piece of wood then with a small 1/4 inch collet wood router using a fairly thin but not too
for a vacumn bond which holds by suction. Silicone is used for glass also. Slate is easily broken so do not use a C-clamp. Use duct tape and props to hold it in place for a day or so. Excellence is its own reward!
plastic piece has come loose and either needs replacing or reglued. I attempted regluing with super glue and pressure (C-clamp) with no success. Anderson sells a replacement piece but no instructions about how to remove the existing piece without
out good solutin is put something in the area where it goes up and down like a bolt in the holes in the rollers,or a C-clamp tightly on the slides or just unplug it,till you get it figurd out is better than getting robbed blind'