A
Anonymous
Guest
In superglue, the actual glue particles are charged ions (+ I think) in a suspension. The ions attract to any "-" charged ions. IE water, or most other kinds of moisture. When when the superglue ions are attracted to the moisture, the glue molecules 'line up' and form the bond. That is why superglue doesn't stick so well to glass or metal (low moisture content) and sticks really well to paper, wood, skin, anything with a high moisture content.
This is also the reason we can't use it underwater- it cures too fast.
And speaking of fraged mushrooms, does anyone have blue and or green striped frags for sale?
B
[ February 17, 2002: Message edited by: Bingo ]</p>
This is also the reason we can't use it underwater- it cures too fast.
And speaking of fraged mushrooms, does anyone have blue and or green striped frags for sale?
B
[ February 17, 2002: Message edited by: Bingo ]</p>



