It will eventually go thick, and in the end solid, UNLESS its kept in the fridge. I first saw this stuff in the 60s as Eastman 910, used by IBM techs, not available retail. Also...if you have a small gap such that it wont set, put a pinch of baking soda in the gap, smooth excess into a fillet with a finger, then drop a minimum amount of the glue on it. The powder will make it set quite quickly. Have been told gas given off here is cyanide, but dont quote me. The stuff is actually a cyano-acrylate. Have repaired a broken turn indicator stalk this way.well, I did not expect that to work but - those worn out splines on the heater lever: I tried a bit of the miracle that is Loctite 660 Liquid metal. I had this from another job (in the kitchen!) - its anaerobic cure so you can not worry about excess, its only between close surfaces it will go hard, hence I wasn't worried about it jamming the heater mechanism up. Left for 24 hours, wiped the uncured off, and the heater lever functions perfect - was sceptical as its the lever that opens the top flat and then has to shift another couple of clicks for the fan speeds, but its solid. Definitely a 'worth a try' substance it seems, but bloody expensive - still, thats two jobs its done now, and it wont go hard in the container, so a wee bit will last a long time.
The three wires are power in (Br/gn) and grounds for the 2 speeds, one going straight for high speed, one going through the resistor for low speed.Got it. Thanks. need to do a bit of squinting at the manual I reckon, as my heater has three wires as opposed to two from the fan motor. Maybe a change from S1 to S2. Hopefully be able to find where the lever earth should be connected to, though anywhere that's a decent and convenient spot will do I guess. Thanks again,
Mick
It will eventually go thick, and in the end solid, UNLESS its kept in the fridge. I first saw this stuff in the 60s as Eastman 910, used by IBM techs, not available retail. Also...if you have a small gap such that it wont set, put a pinch of baking soda in the gap, smooth excess into a fillet with a finger, then drop a minimum amount of the glue on it. The powder will make it set quite quickly. Have been told gas given off here is cyanide, but dont quote me. The stuff is actually a cyano-acrylate. Have repaired a broken turn indicator stalk this way.