How to Reattach a Broken Arm, Leg or Part on a Figurine
A snapped limb or accessory doesn't mean a ruined figure. Learn how to reattach broken parts with a strong invisible bond — including pinning for structural joints.
Snapped limbs and broken accessories are the most common type of figure damage. The repair method depends on how much structural load the joint carries — a decorative wand tip and a weight-bearing ankle need very different approaches.
Assess the Joint Type
Before starting:
- Decorative / low-stress joint (a staff tip, a wing, a cloak element, a small accessory): adhesive alone is sufficient
- Structural / load-bearing joint (ankles, waist, neck, arm attachment at shoulder): needs pinning for a durable repair
Method A — Adhesive Only (Low-Stress Parts)
- Clean both surfaces with IPA, allow to dry 10 minutes
- Apply cyanoacrylate gel sparingly to one surface
- Hold firmly for 90 seconds
- Support in position with masking tape or rubber bands for 24 hours full cure
- Touch up any seam line with matching paint and varnish
Method B — Pinning (Structural Joints)
Pinning involves drilling small holes into both sides of the break and inserting a metal rod (pin) that acts as an internal armature, dramatically increasing strength beyond what adhesive alone can achieve.
Tools for Pinning
- Pin vice (hand drill) with a 0.8–1.5 mm drill bit
- Brass rod or stainless steel wire in matching diameter
- Two-part epoxy adhesive
- Cyanoacrylate for surface finishing
Pinning Step by Step
- Clean break surfaces with IPA
- Mark the drill point on both sides — ideally centred in the thickest part of the cross-section
- Drill into the body side first, 5–10 mm deep depending on part size. Go slowly — low pressure, slow speed
- Insert a short length of pin into the hole. Hold the detached part against it in correct alignment and press gently — the pin will mark the entry point on the detached piece
- Drill the second hole at the marked point
- Dry fit: the pin should slide through both holes with the parts correctly aligned
- Cut the pin so it sits 1–2 mm recessed from each surface when assembled
- Mix two-part epoxy. Fill both holes with epoxy, coat the pin, and assemble. Hold until initial tack, then support for full cure
Hiding the Repair Seam
Even a perfect structural repair usually leaves a visible seam. Fill with a tiny amount of UV-cure resin or super glue, cure, sand to 1000 grit, prime, and touch up with paint. The goal is a smooth surface that accepts paint evenly.
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