My Sterba has urethane edges.
Not sure it is Devcon, though. (not that it matters, either)
It is woodtone/amber or tan color.
I used to use Devcon urethane and the various primers, modifiers and accelerator to stick wood parts to steel and bronze components.
Also moulded it into feed rollers as custom aftermarket replacement, for solid steel planer feed rollers. For myself, and a few other people who liked the idea. Another cool thing you can do with the product is saturate fabric, and wind it over a mandrel (form) to make custom flexible ducting and hoses. The Devcon i used was essentially black. (the resin was clear, so on mixing, it made a sort of translucent black part.) It sure is tough. one set of feed rollers in my 20" planer has 3 decades of fairly hard use and still fine.
Most of my use was before the internet. But a few years ago i looked into getting another gallon, and shopped a bit online. Did not come to a resolution, but there are castable polyurethane products that cost about 1/2 what Devcon does. OTOH it's sort of like WEST epoxy - I am so confident and familiar using it over 40+ years that i won't try other products that cost a fraction, out of superstition. Devcon is also like WEST in the sense of a "system". There's the basic 2 parts resin/hardener. But you need durometer modifier to tailer the hardness desired. If you add that to the mix, then you need accelerator, since the modifier slows the set down too much. Then, depending on the substrate, there are primers to ensure a superior bond.
smt
Not sure it is Devcon, though. (not that it matters, either)
It is woodtone/amber or tan color.
I used to use Devcon urethane and the various primers, modifiers and accelerator to stick wood parts to steel and bronze components.
Also moulded it into feed rollers as custom aftermarket replacement, for solid steel planer feed rollers. For myself, and a few other people who liked the idea. Another cool thing you can do with the product is saturate fabric, and wind it over a mandrel (form) to make custom flexible ducting and hoses. The Devcon i used was essentially black. (the resin was clear, so on mixing, it made a sort of translucent black part.) It sure is tough. one set of feed rollers in my 20" planer has 3 decades of fairly hard use and still fine.
Most of my use was before the internet. But a few years ago i looked into getting another gallon, and shopped a bit online. Did not come to a resolution, but there are castable polyurethane products that cost about 1/2 what Devcon does. OTOH it's sort of like WEST epoxy - I am so confident and familiar using it over 40+ years that i won't try other products that cost a fraction, out of superstition. Devcon is also like WEST in the sense of a "system". There's the basic 2 parts resin/hardener. But you need durometer modifier to tailer the hardness desired. If you add that to the mix, then you need accelerator, since the modifier slows the set down too much. Then, depending on the substrate, there are primers to ensure a superior bond.
smt