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- Oct 3, 2015
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Looks like the gap was not shimmed tight or the sheet was not flat prior to pinning the joint = too much gap when you pull the pins. Plus no weight on top of joint. But if it's just an inner, non-structural baffle, you can run 16/33 on each side (maybe a few times) and that will prevent water from getting through the joint.
2 things going on here that I see. Something odd was done with the euro joint to get the solvent to show in that pattern. Typically you assemble the front/back/sides and then bond on the top panel with the top panel flat, so solvent can't really "wick up" in a pattern like that. My guess is that additional solvent (maybe 16, maybe 40) was added after the fact to reinforce the joint, possibly with the assembly tilted on the corner. Shouldn't be a problem if the joint is strong afterwards, just doesn't look pretty. Could also be bonded in high humidity, which turns the area of the bond (solvent/melted acrylic) white.
The flush trim and chamfer pass look like they were ran too fast, particularly the chamfer. When you push through the router too fast, you get those little pits. FYI you can get a roundover or chamfer bit and make another slower pass and clean that up very easily, but you might leave a few scratches on the acrylic if all the dust and bits are not cleaned off. Hard to not induce scratches on black when the paper is off. You could mask off the top with wide blue tape to avoid that
Good information re the 16/33, thank you.
Yeah, I've assembled a few simple acrylic things in the past, and none had that solvent-drippage. It always wicked up into the joint. It was probably an attempt to reinforce seams. I don't think I will try to run another pass with a router; Ill just live with it. Just bummed with the sump quality- at $600 ($550 on sale) for a 48" sump, I was hoping for more; especially from a r2r vendor.