Do the fiberglas and then pop rivet the glass to it after it sets.Thanks for the replies.
You may see that I tried some fiberglass, but I'm sure I didn't prep it properly. There was no tooth for it to hold onto.
I guess I could buy the new part. It is extremely brittle. I was given the mower, and besides gas, fuses, a rear tire, and a clutch, it has held up well.
Danno1 said:.
Buy some aluminum house flashing fr HD or Lowes. Get Devcon Plastic Welder epoxy fr Walmart or McMaster-Carr.
Rough up the inside of the hood and the flashing w some very coarse sandpaper, 40-80 grit. Cut the flashing to whatever shape is needed. Degrease everything using alcohol. Glue up the hood first and then glue on the flashing as a backer/reinforcement.
Alternate method is get some ABS or PVC strips fr McMaster-Carr and use them in place of the aluminum.
I've done this w motorcycle parts and it works very well.
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Another practical (not pretty) method would be to drill tint parallel holes both sides of the split line and sew with fine wire to hold the split closed. The sew line is then covered with silicone to seal out water. (many an older aircraft windshield was repaired in this manner)