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I had a loose bridge, instead of paying £80 to a dentist to glue it back on I used Automix. The instructions are easy to follow and it is very easy to use. The bridge was bonded back within seconds and cured within 5 minutes. So far it has been 4 days without any movement and there are 9 more applications in the tube.
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Good mixing, fast reaction and instructions are ok. Shear strength is poor. I reattached an eye tooth crown and it has only lasted a day at the most. I've modified the mix strength all to no avail. On a direct pressure crown, ie no shear action, I think it would be fine.
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I've just used this product a second time to fix a post in a front tooth. The cement used previously by my dentist had failed several times after a few weeks. The first application of this product lasted 2 years, so I decided to use it again, a few weeks ago. So far it's doing OK. The instruction page supplied is not very helpful but the product seems to work well if applied with cleanliness and common sense.
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I bought this product as a temporary fix for my bridge that had come out. It was easy to use despite the sparse instructions. I find the adhesive lasts about a fortnight before coming loose again which is brilliant.
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Takes a couple of goes to perfect a technique with it, but if done properly it does last a long time. After some reviews I half expected it to fail quickly, but my first try of repairing a tooth where a filling had just fallen out lasted a few months. I waited after another try before reviewing to make sure it's ok, and after doing a much better job, it's now been well over four months with the tooth perfect. When I eventually got to the dentist, she said it was so well stuck, it wasn't worth grinding out to replace at the moment. So very happy with it. My tips would be if you're doing this at home - buy a cheap small set of dentist tools so that you get something decent shaped to push it in the tooth with etc. Use a hair dryer on a low setting to blow into your mouth and make the area where the tooth is bone dry, lean your head over so that while you're dribbling, the area of the repair stays dry! Don't panic with the mixing of the compound, just add the powder over to the the liquid resin with the tool to get a mould-able mix about the consistency that will stay on a tooth without dripping out. I prepped the tooth very carefully with a tiny fraction of sand paper on a sharp tool to abrade the filling cavity slightly, plus washed out with corsodyl before starting. Make the best job you can of shaping to the tooth once pushed in the cavity. Optional - Hold a cheap UV bank note checker into your mouth, getting the UV light on the new filling for a couple of minutes while it's setting, then while it's still dry, get the hair dryer on it again warming up the area of the filling slightly and it will set hard as rock. Do this over a sink as streams of dribble will be falling out the front of your mouth by this time (unless you are lucky enough to have stolen the dentists vacuum tool). For finishing off if it needs a bit of final smoothing, carefully use a dental tool with a tiny piece of fine grade sand paper but don't go over the edges onto your tooth enamel. Bit mad but that's how I did it, and instead of criticising it, the dentist said she was quite impressed with how well it had worked :)Read full review
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