Heat Resistant Glass Sealant - 310ml Stock Number: ES914819
High performance, heat resistant silicon sealant for repairing oven glass and door fixings.
Will this part fit my Appliance?
This product is compatible with:
- Cookers & Hobs
Heat Resistant Glass Sealant - 310ml
This quick curing silicone sealant is temperature resistant up to 300 degrees and can be used as a gasket seal in boilers, ovens, ducting, flue and heating applications. Perfect for sticking on an oven door seal.
Specification:
- Excellent adhesion to most non-porous surfaces
- Sticks best to aluminium, ceramics and metals
- Suitable for exterior and interior use
- Fast cure - tack free in one hour
- Permanent flexibility
- 25 years life expectancy
Areas of use: For joints and assemblies which must be resistant to high temperatures in ducting, metal chimneys, industrial/domestic ovens, heating appliances.
31 Questions and 39 Answers
- If it was originally glued on and not screwed then this will do the job perfectly. You need to leave it a few hours (eg overnight) to set fully before use.
- In my opinion yes, but even if it doesn't it won't cost the earth to find out. I say give it a go! good luck.
Our 10+ year old oven's plastic door handle has become detached, evidently because the metal screws holding it to the door's metal frame no longer engage with their holes in the plastic handle (the holes must have lost some thread). Some screws holding the oven frame in a chipboard surround are spinning in a similar way, although I don't think they affect functionality (it seems solid enough). I thought about repairing both with superglue, but read that PVA can produce cyanide gas at temperatures above 230C so this seems rather risky. As Heat Mate is OK to 300C, is it the best product to fix the various screws in place, or is some other adhesive/sealant better?
- Have you tried different bolts, either longer ones of the same size to use the thread further in the handle, or bigger ones and rethread the plastic of the handle. This stuff probably would do the job but it is a big cartridge and you would only need a small amount. The holes in the chipboard you could pack out with matchsticks (remove the heads obviously). Works as a sort of DIY rawlplug.
- Answering my own query after waiting in vain for anyone else to do so... and after hitting upon the revolutionary idea of calling the manufacturer (doh!)... Their technical services department were very helpful, and said (a) the sealant is not 'structural' so might pull straight out again if subjected to any significant load; (b) two-part epoxy resin adhesives (araldite etc.) are fine at high temperatures and stronger than sealants, so that's what I need. There were incidentally other problems I noticed from the docs on the EverBuild website and they confirmed, e.g. 'minimum width 6mm', 'do not use on soft metals such as brass', etc.
Should all the old silicone be removed from the door first, or can this go over the existing sealant? 2 Answers
- You need to scrape the old stuff off and clean off all grease with meths or similar.
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Rory at eSpares says...
Hi Nigelashley, I'd advise removing as much old sealant as possible, as the new sealant will adhere much better to the surface of the oven.
- This is what i have used it for and it has worked (so far!) Pretty easy to apply and oven was used the next day
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Rory at eSpares says...
Hi Mums, this sealant is made just for this purpose - it will re-stick your door glass just like that.
- yes it works, but is a bit messy, dont spill any
- Although the oven has only been used twice since applying the new adhesive it seems to have done the job. It was used to re-fix the inner oven glass (NEFF) which had come adrift after 10 years of regular usage. I'm hopeful that it will last at least another 10 years, when it will probably be time for a new one! Beware though, the sealant / adhesive can be very messy to apply if you haven't done it before. Need to spend time to ensure that the old surfaces are thoroughly cleaned up.