Subject: Adhesive for stone
To Helena Jaeschke, thanks for your tips! The conservation of the sculpture is part of my education at Fachhochschule Hildesheim, Germany. Therefore I'm doing a little test-program for stone adhesives in museum-environment. Mechanical properties of the bond like modulus of elasticity, tensile/shear strength and creep rupture will be tested with different adhesives on porous limestone. Paraloid B72 will be enclosed in the testing program beside wheat starch, methylcellulose, a dispersion of acrylic polymer (Primal AC33) and others. Properties of adhesives mixed with fillers (fumed silica, sand, micro-balloons) will also be tested. I think B72 will be a good choice for all the smaller parts I have to fix. Will it also be probable for the bonds that will have to take more stress, e.g. to fix new dowels? Do you have any experience with that, especially concerning the "cold creep"? I didn't mean to consolidate the limestone, because the strength of the stone is not high, but homogeneous: Consolidation of the bond areas will only move the weak zone deeper into the stone. Complete impregnation of the sculpture with a consolidant is out of question, because it is partly painted. A conductive test showed that there are no soluble salts. I used a water-ethanol mixture to loosen old shellac bonded joints, no efflorescence or discoloration showed. Olaf Pung *** Conservation DistList Instance 11:76 Distributed: Wednesday, March 11, 1998 Message Id: cdl-11-76-011 ***Received on Monday, 9 March, 1998