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Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > April 2006 > Filling Cracks In Old Railroad Ties ?
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Filling Cracks In Old Railroad Ties ?
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| Robert11 2006-04-03, 11:21 am |
| Hi,
Have purchased a few old railroad ties that I plan on using
to define some garden area borders.
Being quite old, and previously used, they have several substantial cracks
(checking the right term ?) in them.
Thought it would be a good idea to pour "something" in the cracks to help
hold them together, and as a secondary
consideration to keep moisture from getting inside them and causing more
cracks or enlarging those already there.
So, what should I use to hopefully help hold them together ?
My first thought was epoxy, but I doubt that it is fluid enough to really
get inside deeply.
Would Gorilla Glue bond surfaces with perhaps 1/16 - 1/8 inch gaps ?
Or,... ?
Thanks,
Bob
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| dadiOH 2006-04-03, 12:21 pm |
| Robert11 wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Have purchased a few old railroad ties that I plan on using
> to define some garden area borders.
>
> Being quite old, and previously used, they have several substantial
> cracks (checking the right term ?) in them.
>
> Thought it would be a good idea to pour "something" in the cracks to
> help hold them together, and as a secondary
> consideration to keep moisture from getting inside them and causing
> more cracks or enlarging those already there.
Not a good idea...filling the cracks/checks won't stop moisture but it
*will* trap it.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
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| Grandpa 2006-04-03, 1:21 pm |
| dadiOH wrote:
> Robert11 wrote:
>
>
>
> Not a good idea...filling the cracks/checks won't stop moisture but it
> *will* trap it.
>
Not to mention that railroad ties are not the best thing for garden
borders. Particularly not for vegetable gardens. Take your idea into the
rec.garden group and see what their advice is.
--
Grandpa
What is that dripping from my fingers?
Why it looks like time.
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| "Robert11" <rgsros@notme.com> wrote in message
news:F5ydnT4mSpCFvqzZnZ2dnUVZ_vadnZ2d@comcast.com...
> Hi,
>
> Have purchased a few old railroad ties that I plan on using
> to define some garden area borders.
>
> Being quite old, and previously used, they have several substantial cracks
> (checking the right term ?) in them.
>
> Thought it would be a good idea to pour "something" in the cracks to help
> hold them together, and as a secondary
> consideration to keep moisture from getting inside them and causing more
> cracks or enlarging those already there.
>
> So, what should I use to hopefully help hold them together ?
>
> My first thought was epoxy, but I doubt that it is fluid enough to really
> get inside deeply.
>
> Would Gorilla Glue bond surfaces with perhaps 1/16 - 1/8 inch gaps ?
>
> Or,... ?
>
> Thanks,
> Bob
>
You are probably out of luck - I know of nothing that will do what you want
and last for a long time. Epoxy would do it but also trap moisture and
eventually fail. Plus - It will cost more than just getting new landscape
timbers or some other type of edging.
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[snip]
.. Plus - It will cost more than just getting new landscape
> timbers or some other type of edging.
Not the 3 x 5 landscape timbers from the typical big box stores, please.
They're termite magnets and not up to long term use. -- Regards --
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