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I asked this once before and got an answer to everything but the original question so I'll try to be more specific.  If I paint a wood building  prior to assembly I use ACC to stick it together. The weather is nice today just a small breeze so I painted 3 1/2 sections of a River Leaf bridge outside. It took 2 cans. It's painted with Krylon Camo and I would like to assemble it with Titebond so I have time to make adjustments if necessary. All the surfaces are painted since I didn't know how it goes together. Can I glue it without sanding the gluing surfaces or not? Will wood glue hold paint to paint?

Yes I could just try it and see what happens but I wouldn't want it to fall apart later.

Thanks

joe

Last edited by dobermann
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Joe:

When one glues two painted surfaces the glue joint is to the paint. No matter what glue is use the bond strength between the glue and the paint will be stronger than the bond between the paint and the wood (which is not strong). For a stationary model you might get away with it. For a structure that will take weight like a bridge the structure could fall apart. 

If you have not glued parts together as yet then carefully sand or scrape the paint off the bond joints. If you have already glued the parts together pull on them. The weak joints will separate (paint from wood). Scrape or sand the paint away and reglue.

Joe

I have glued wood structures both before and after painting, always using Aileen's (goes on white and dries clear). Never really found a difference and they've held well for years. I do, however, always, glue a brace inside where the walls join, so it's a very well constructed structure. You may not be able to do that on a bridge, so sanding a bit where the pieces will join may be a good idea. 

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