Adhesive Types
A guide to common adhesives used in model making
Cyanoacrylates (Superglues)
Superglue Thin (Cyanoacrylate)
Low-viscosity cyanoacrylate that flows into tight joints by capillary action. Bonds in seconds. Not suitable for gap-filling or near clear parts (fumes cause fogging).
Cyanoacrylate (CA) glues bond almost instantly by reacting with moisture on the surfaces being joined. βThinβ or βliquidβ superglue has a water-like viscosity β it flows into tight-fitting joints by capillary action, which makes it ideal for parts that sit flush together.
The trade-off is that thin CA has virtually no gap-filling ability. If thereβs any space between parts, the bond will be weak. Cured CA is also brittle under shock and shear β strong when holding parts in tension, but can snap if dropped or knocked. Itβs widely used in scale modelling for attaching small, close-fitting parts β photo-etch brass, fine detail pieces, and anywhere speed matters more than repositioning time. The fumes can fog clear parts and nearby surfaces, so keep canopies and lenses well away (or use a dedicated canopy glue instead). An accelerator spray can speed up curing in seconds, but tends to make the bond even more brittle and can cause white bloom on surrounding surfaces.