Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vacuum forming coil housings

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    Originally posted by Tilladude View Post
    Many mucho thanks robert, this will be very useful in the extreme.

    Dennis
    Hi Dennis,

    You are welcome!

    And I hope that all will work out well for you.

    Regards,

    Robert

    Comment


    • #32
      Do It Yourself Vacuum Forming for the Hobbyist - By Douglas E. Walsh (1990)



      * Author: Douglas E. Walsh
      * Number of Pages: 135 (70 double scans)
      * Publisher: Workshop Publishing
      * Publication Date: 1990 (10th Printing 2005)
      * Language: English
      * ASIN: B000KBEU3W
      * Cover: Paperback
      * Format: PDF
      * Size: 48.02 MB

      Description:

      An illustrated guide to small scale vacuum forming you can do in your home. The purpose of this book is to take a little understood manufacturing process and reduce it to its simplest form, so it can be done right in the home. Vacuum forming should not be ignored in the hobby and craft fields. It is easy, clean and a fast way to make high quality plastic parts. Small scale vacuum forming can be done in your own home with no special skills and very little equipment.

      The contents include:

      * Examples of Parts and Equipment
      * Heat Sources, Ovens
      * Vacuum sources, vacuum cleaners, measurements and conversions, check valves
      * Forming Equipment, clamping frames, seals
      * Plastics, common types, sources, characteristics
      * Molds
      * Forming
      * Finishing

      Download (42.39 MB):

      Do It Yourself Vacuum Forming for the Hobbyist - By Douglas E. Walsh (Workshop Publishing - 1990) 70s (d).pdf

      as

      Vacuum Forming - Walsh (1990).rar

      iFile.it Download Link:
      http://ifile.it/hfmy72k

      or (optional)

      MegaUpload Download Link:

      http://www.megaupload.com/?d=3WNIOJM9

      No Password Required !

      Enjoy !

      Robert

      Comment


      • #33
        Wow! a beut! recourse of info!But a lot of work? jigs!,frames! etc etc.Love it! just all the time to get together for this?Now in my next life time?I will achieve it all!for a home builder that is!
        Thanks very much for this info!Rov.

        Comment


        • #34
          You are welcome @Rov

          For You!, ... and this You can
          achieve in THIS lifetime!

          Vacuum Forming by using a Vacuum Cleaner and a Household Oven like proposed by @dfbowers

          Enjoy !

          Robert

          Attachment:

          Vacuum Forming
          with a Vacuum Cleaner and a Household Oven
          Attached Files

          Comment


          • #35
            Thanks!Cyclonite! Im ams till very busyon Bill Hayes coil shells from my last shipment from him,he does a very good job! to me..I see your attachments an it means easy sense.Its still the internals,with the winds and screening still is the science to perfect?? for shell size?
            regards Rov

            Comment


            • #36
              You are welcome @Rov

              And about the Search Coil:

              @Ivconic has done a pretty good job in explaining How-to-Make, and Nullify a Search Coil in his Article Titled:

              TGSLCoil Making.pdf


              You can download it here:
              http://www.geotech1.com/forums/attac...3&d=1250678672

              Regards,

              Robert

              Comment


              • #37
                TGSL coil housings

                I'll post this in the "Tools & Techniques" section as well.
                I finally put together a complete document. I have a "clean"
                .doc if anyone wants a copy, but it's 8 Meg.

                Don.
                Attached Files

                Comment


                • #38
                  hi dfbowers
                  what are you using for pomp tu suck off all the air?
                  best regards

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Originally posted by lunamay View Post
                    hi dfbowers
                    what are you using for pomp tu suck off all the air?
                    best regards

                    A Shop Vacuum cleaner.. Craftsman 2.5 H.P.

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      i will make something like you. i think that its a great idea. i have an old but powerfull vaccume cleaner so now i have to make a box.
                      i have a question
                      what kind of plastic do you use and how hot must it be to form in vaccum
                      did you ever try to make encloser from pleksi?

                      best regards

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by lunamay View Post
                        i will make something like you. i think that its a great idea. i have an old but powerfull vaccume cleaner so now i have to make a box.
                        i have a question
                        what kind of plastic do you use and how hot must it be to form in vaccum
                        did you ever try to make encloser from pleksi?

                        best regards
                        Hi, lunamay.

                        Can you open the .zip file I posted in the above message? There are two links in there for different kinds of plastics that I have ordered and tried. Styrene and ABS, 1/16". Most plastics have a working temperature of 325 to 350 degrees, but I have been making the oven about 100 degrees hotter. Just make sure that you get the plastic out of the oven before it melts!

                        Don

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Originally posted by dfbowers View Post
                          Thanks for the information. I started with a wooden box and just drilled tiny holes, like an air hockey table. Then hook up a shop vacuum.

                          I use a wooden former for the coil housing. The sheet of plastic gets put on a frame while it goes into the oven. Leave it in for about 1 minute @ 425 degrees. When it starts to sag, turn the vacuum on, take the frame out of the oven REALLY fast and lay it on top of the vacuum form table. Voila!
                          I have heard that you can use a bandsaw to cut off the excess, but I just use a Dremmel cut off wheel on a drill press.

                          Here is what the finished coil looks like:
                          You're a great craftsman; not so easy as it sounds I'm sure; very nice!

                          -SB

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            my owen has only 200C so it's to cold for abs or styren..i should try to make some enclosier in other place:P

                            best regards..great job dfbowers

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Lunamay:

                              200C is 392F, that should be hot enough, it might take a litte longer to soften the plastic than it does for DB. Just keep an eye on it and when it slumps in the middle it's ready.

                              Good luck,
                              Dennis

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Db I was just looking thru my US Plastics ca. and came across this sheet ABS so I jumped to their site and came up with the url for it, I tinyized it.

                                http://tinyurl.com/2ayduxc

                                I haven't gone to Micro-Mark to see what their prices are but you mentioned that the sheets were small, well USP's sheet is 4' X 8' which should open up possibilities a bit.

                                Dennis

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X