Shane here is Marios post
[QUOTE=Mario] Me, I use the go-bar deck. Let's say I'm about the glue the back to the rim.
I set the dish on the deck. Line it with some paper for padding(about ten sheets of newsprint). Lay the back down on this, and then test drop the rim set on it, and add a few go0-bars to snug it. Just 4-6 bars for now. I'll now shut the shop lights, and with a flashlight inside the "body", I'll shoot light at teh edge all the way aorund, to be positive that we have a dead-on perfect fit. Once satisfied of the fit, I'll trun the lights back on, make a couple index marks inside from the linings to the back, for future reference, and gently lift the rim set off the back. The back remains in the dish.
Set the rim set nect to the dish, and take the hair dryer to the surface. About 1-1/2 minute's worth of going 'round and 'round gets it nice and warm. Now, I reach formy glue bottle, which is sitting in the water bath, right next to all of this(see a pattern? Everything is right there, with me; I could glue my feet to the floor, and still be able to do this). I now run a bead of glue all around the rim; this takes, oh, ten seconds. While running the bead, I slopped a bit extra at the blocks. No need to spread this stuff! just run the bead.
Drop the bottle(no need to be nice, now, just drop the thing), and grab the rim set, flip it over quickly, and drop it on the back. Line it up to the index marks I drew in a few minutes before, and press down on the rim with my body weight, just a bit, to set the glue. Now, quickly grab the go bars which are laid out right there(again, be prepared), and start seting them, starting with two at each block, then staggering them around the rim.
Total time, under a minute, and with the warmed edge, we have made it with time to spare.
Now, take you time, and using a brush dipped in the hot water, start cleaning up the squeeze-out. Brush in one hand, hair dryer in the other, drying the edge where you just washed the glue from. This step is important! You will use lots pof water to clean it up, so keep the hair dryer going.
For the top, I'm much more careful with how big the bead will be, and I've never had much cleaning up to do. and if you do find a run or something a couple days down the road, a rag dipped in boikling water will clean it nicely, followed again by the hair dryer to dry it right away.
Same steps for the top, but I now will add a 1/4" plywood 'donut' to protect the top from the go bars. Otherwise, same-same...
And the rim set is always in the form throught all of this.
You can practice this by doing dry runs a few times. I still do a couple dry runs each time, myself.
The flashlight stage is quite revealing, also. I'm still surprised how many times I think my brace-to-rim fit was fine, only to see that I needed to file a bit on two or three notches.
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