Jul 30th, '15, 00:15
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Zisha pot repair

by MarcusReed » Jul 30th, '15, 00:15

Recently broke a lid was wondering since it's such a clean break has anyone had any success in reattaching yixing clay??
Thanks in advance!
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Jul 30th, '15, 00:35
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by BW85 » Jul 30th, '15, 00:35

JB weld works good.

Or this http://humade.nl/products/new-kintsugi-1

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Jul 30th, '15, 02:40
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by kyarazen » Jul 30th, '15, 02:40

Indeed jb weld is good for external repairs but should not be considered for internal repairs as it contains bisphenol A

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Jul 30th, '15, 03:37
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by Tead Off » Jul 30th, '15, 03:37

BW85 wrote:JB weld works good.

Or this http://humade.nl/products/new-kintsugi-1
That kintsugi looks horrid on Euro porcelains.

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Jul 30th, '15, 03:41
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by Tead Off » Jul 30th, '15, 03:41

kyarazen wrote:Indeed jb weld is good for external repairs but should not be considered for internal repairs as it contains bisphenol A
Would the very small amount of JBweld that would be used on a repair to the body of a teapot be much of a health risk? The reports talk about cans lined with plastic as being suspect. The small amount of jbweld surely couldn't compare to the lining of a tin can, could it?

Jul 30th, '15, 07:38
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by .m. » Jul 30th, '15, 07:38

Tead Off wrote:
BW85 wrote:JB weld works good.

Or this http://humade.nl/products/new-kintsugi-1
That kintsugi looks horrid on Euro porcelains.
Totally agree. Kintsugi must be done really well to be beautiful, else it may end looking a bit vulgar. Also, the linked set has nothing to do with kintsugi, just epoxy glue and a cheap powder (steel or mica?)... I'd probably just use an old-school epoxy to glue the knob back. Good luck with the repair.

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Jul 30th, '15, 07:48
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by William » Jul 30th, '15, 07:48

Tead Off wrote:
BW85 wrote:JB weld works good.

Or this http://humade.nl/products/new-kintsugi-1
That kintsugi looks horrid on Euro porcelains.
Agree. That is how kintsugi/gintsugi shouldn't be done!

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Jul 30th, '15, 11:07
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by kyarazen » Jul 30th, '15, 11:07

Tead Off wrote:
kyarazen wrote:Indeed jb weld is good for external repairs but should not be considered for internal repairs as it contains bisphenol A
Would the very small amount of JBweld that would be used on a repair to the body of a teapot be much of a health risk? The reports talk about cans lined with plastic as being suspect. The small amount of jbweld surely couldn't compare to the lining of a tin can, could it?
No idea. In principle bpa in tin linings are crosslinked forms that are used as coatings. In jbweld it is uncrosslinked bpa that is induced to be crosslinked. If 100% all is crosslinked, it willbe just like coarings etc, but if some bpa are free, it will leach. Plus teapots see lots of repeated heating with hotwater, materials can breakdown faster over time than being kept all the time at room temp.

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Jul 30th, '15, 14:47
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by hobin » Jul 30th, '15, 14:47

for teachatters living in europe this site could be of some help

http://tsugi.de/de/beispiele-1.html

(my teaware hasn't been in need of a kintsugi yet, but you'll never know...)

Dec 15th, '15, 15:13
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by MarcusReed » Dec 15th, '15, 15:13

fixed, has been for months. thanks all to helped!
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Dec 16th, '15, 18:03
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by ragamuffin » Dec 16th, '15, 18:03

Looks good! What did you decide to use?

Dec 27th, '15, 10:27
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by MarcusReed » Dec 27th, '15, 10:27

ragamuffin wrote:Looks good! What did you decide to use?
This has been my Heavy Roast Yancha Pot as I sell and drink rock tea the most :mrgreen:

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Dec 27th, '15, 12:59
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by pedant » Dec 27th, '15, 12:59

what repair product / method did you decide to use? any reflections on the repair process? suggestions for future repairs?

Dec 27th, '15, 14:29
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Re: Zisha pot repair

by MarcusReed » Dec 27th, '15, 14:29

pedant wrote:what repair product / method did you decide to use? any reflections on the repair process? suggestions for future repairs?
I used the method of kintsugi.
Easily bought online for relativity cheap less than 30$ shipped.
My reflections are don't rush the repair process.
The glue was applied heavily in this particular repair and isn't visually as clean as it could be, but I would strongly recommend trying to type of repair.

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