Silicone sealer remains tacky 48+ hours after application. It should be hard and non-adhesive. Poor cure indicates application or environmental problems.
Root Causes and Fixes
1. Too much heat too soon. Heat accelerates cure but can trap solvents if applied before initial cure phase. Result: Partially cured, permanently tacky sealer.
Fix: Allow room-temperature cure (24 hours minimum) before applying heat.
2. High humidity. Humidity slows silicone cure (moisture interferes with cross-linking).
Fix: Cure in <85% RH, preferably dry environment.
3. Cold temperature. Below 50°F, cure slows dramatically or stops entirely.
Fix: Warm environment to 60–80°F before and during cure.
4. Contaminated surface. Oil, moisture, or other contaminants prevent proper adhesion and cure.
Fix: Solvent-clean surface thoroughly; dry completely before application.
5. Expired or degraded sealer. Old sealer may have poor shelf life or degraded components.
Fix: Use fresh material; check expiration date.
6. Insufficient cure time. 24 hours is minimum; some formulations need 48+ hours.
Fix: Allow full cure time before use or thermal exposure.
Verification and Troubleshooting
Cured properly: Hard, no tackiness, cannot compress with fingernail
Under-cured: Tacky, compresses easily, smears when rubbed
Over-cured (rare): May be slightly brittle, but functional
If tacky after 48 hours at room temperature in dry conditions, sealer is defective or conditions are wrong.
Salvage Options
If cure is delayed but in progress: Wait additional 24–48 hours; may eventually cure in favorable conditions.
If cure has stalled: Remove sealer (solvent clean), reapply with new batch in proper conditions.
If sealer is permanently tacky: Discard and replace with fresh sealer.
Incure silicone sealers cure reliably when proper conditions are maintained.
Email Us if your sealer isn’t curing; we’ll troubleshoot the issue.
Visit www.incurelab.com for more information.