I recently needed to glue the mitered halves of ogee bracket feet. It's awkward not only because of their shape (no flat surfaces), but also because you have just the two pieces to try to clamp, instead of four.
I used a medium-set superglue from a (3 oz.?) bottle I got at Woodcraft. I did a trial using pieces of 1" Eastern White Pine.
The key to success is to lightly mist the mating surfaces with a water spray and then apply the glue to one of the surfaces. I used only hand pressure to press the halves together for about 30 seconds.
In about 2 minutes, I tried to break the joint apart (the sides were about 6" long and 4" wide, so I could exert a lot of force, both pulling and pushing the ends of the pieces. I could not break the joint.
With that successful trial, I glued all four sets of bracket feet in very short order. No clamps needed. Or nails. Or screws. Or Dominoes. Or lengthy clamping time. Just perfect, knife-edge, air-tight miters.
BTW, my Kapex did an admirable job of cutting glass-smooth perfect 45-degree miters prior to the glue up.
Maybe this has been told here before, but it was a real eye-opener to me.
I used a medium-set superglue from a (3 oz.?) bottle I got at Woodcraft. I did a trial using pieces of 1" Eastern White Pine.
The key to success is to lightly mist the mating surfaces with a water spray and then apply the glue to one of the surfaces. I used only hand pressure to press the halves together for about 30 seconds.
In about 2 minutes, I tried to break the joint apart (the sides were about 6" long and 4" wide, so I could exert a lot of force, both pulling and pushing the ends of the pieces. I could not break the joint.
With that successful trial, I glued all four sets of bracket feet in very short order. No clamps needed. Or nails. Or screws. Or Dominoes. Or lengthy clamping time. Just perfect, knife-edge, air-tight miters.
BTW, my Kapex did an admirable job of cutting glass-smooth perfect 45-degree miters prior to the glue up.
Maybe this has been told here before, but it was a real eye-opener to me.