Originally posted by satdaveuk
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Vacuum forming coil housings.
Collapse
X
-
@ satdaveuk
for the procedure it is not necessary to take an industrial oven or vacuum cleaner.
For my projects i only use standard home tools- i want to show that eveybody can do this by his own at home. My oven works most time on 180 degree celsius (pizza).
And i tried this too for my plastic sheets it works. My vac cleaner has 1200 watt (middle class).
But if you have professionel parts and tools why do not try them. But pay attention more is not even better. When i write this i must think of tool time with tim taylor
@ simonbaker
in times of emancipation and women are superior because of quote (not because of skill)
it is good that there are some places we can be among us
but if there are any women in forum i love you (because of technical interest)
Comment
-
Strain Relief
Just thought I would mention that my Hays Electronics coil housing came with a strain relief marked Hummel PG7. It looks just like the Heyco model. It seems they do sell it separately for $1.90.
http://www.hayselectronics.com/parts.htm
MercAttached Files
Comment
-
Originally posted by Merc View PostJust thought I would mention that my Hays Electronics coil housing came with a strain relief marked Hummel PG7. It looks just like the Heyco model. It seems they do sell it separately for $1.90.
http://www.hayselectronics.com/parts.htm
Merc
http://www.heyco.com/products/sec_02/ltf.html
Comment
-
Third time is the charm....... sort of.
Well I finally got everything ready for making some coil shells. One thing that was real apparent with the first two tries, is it is not as easy as Dfbowers makes it seem with his fine work. But then people who know what they are doing make it look easy even if it is not. My thanks to Don for taking the time to document and post his work with vacuum forming. This is what got me started in the first place. It will no doubt take a few more tries before I have the technique figured out.
A few things I have noticed:
1. Get the plastic hot enough so it sags several inches. Once it starts to drop, it goes fairly fast.
2. You need to move quickly after taking out of oven and placing on vacuum table. Pretty much have one shot at it. So I made side wall for locating frame so it is just a matter of stuffing it into a corner and dropping down onto the table/form.
3. When it is on the table, the heat gun does not provide enough heat for the vacuum to pull it the plastic tight to the form. I melted holes in the first two tries. I got better luck with using my hands (with gloves) to quickly work the plastic into tight spots. You only have a short time before the plastic gets hard.
4. It was easier for me to rough trim the outside of the shell and place it back on wood form and then use the heat gun on low power and heat a small area and hold it tight to the form until cool and then move to the next area. If you do not get into a hurry this works.
5. The area between the clevis ears does not form properly. I drilled a hole between the ears to put more vacuum in that area and it is better but now the vacuum makes a hole without completely pulling the plastic tight to the form. I can trim this once it is filled with epoxy but is not as neat looking as it should be.
6. I wonder if it is possible to have too much vacuum suction for a given hole size on the table. One two of the shells, the vacuum sucked plastic right through the hole. Thinking maybe smaller diameter holes and more of them. As I recall I used a .19 inch diameter drill when I made the table.
The first picture is vacuum table, form and the best of three tries.
Second picture is close up of best shell.
Third shows what happens with too much use of the heat gun.
I think I can salvage the first attempt. It should make a usable but ugly looking coil
Anyway that is my tale of coil making for today
Jerry
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jerry View PostWell I finally got everything ready for making some coil shells. One thing that was real apparent with the first two tries, is it is not as easy as Dfbowers makes it seem with his fine work. But then people who know what they are doing make it look easy even if it is not. My thanks to Don for taking the time to document and post his work with vacuum forming. This is what got me started in the first place. It will no doubt take a few more tries before I have the technique figured out.
A few things I have noticed:
1. Get the plastic hot enough so it sags several inches. Once it starts to drop, it goes fairly fast.
2. You need to move quickly after taking out of oven and placing on vacuum table. Pretty much have one shot at it. So I made side wall for locating frame so it is just a matter of stuffing it into a corner and dropping down onto the table/form.
3. When it is on the table, the heat gun does not provide enough heat for the vacuum to pull it the plastic tight to the form. I melted holes in the first two tries. I got better luck with using my hands (with gloves) to quickly work the plastic into tight spots. You only have a short time before the plastic gets hard.
4. It was easier for me to rough trim the outside of the shell and place it back on wood form and then use the heat gun on low power and heat a small area and hold it tight to the form until cool and then move to the next area. If you do not get into a hurry this works.
5. The area between the clevis ears does not form properly. I drilled a hole between the ears to put more vacuum in that area and it is better but now the vacuum makes a hole without completely pulling the plastic tight to the form. I can trim this once it is filled with epoxy but is not as neat looking as it should be.
6. I wonder if it is possible to have too much vacuum suction for a given hole size on the table. One two of the shells, the vacuum sucked plastic right through the hole. Thinking maybe smaller diameter holes and more of them. As I recall I used a .19 inch diameter drill when I made the table.
The first picture is vacuum table, form and the best of three tries.
Second picture is close up of best shell.
Third shows what happens with too much use of the heat gun.
I think I can salvage the first attempt. It should make a usable but ugly looking coil
Anyway that is my tale of coil making for today
Jerry
1. Time/temp is so critical. Too hot and it melts. Too cold and it does not form. I have been erroring on the side of too cold lately. I have a stopwatch and pay close attention to exactly how long it stays in the oven. Also, I always start with a cold oven, preheat, and then put my plastic frame in the oven. I have been doing them one at a time lately as the second one I put in the oven will generally get hot much faster.
5. I did not elaborate on the ears that much, but I did the same thing with drilling a hole on the form between the ears to help get the air out. I have a small wooden tool that just fits between the ears. While the plastic is still soft, I just press the tool down between the ears. It comes out perfect most of the time.
Don
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jerry View PostWell I finally got everything ready for making some coil shells. One thing that was real apparent with the first two tries, is it is not as easy as Dfbowers makes it seem with his fine work. But then people who know what they are doing make it look easy even if it is not. My thanks to Don for taking the time to document and post his work with vacuum forming. This is what got me started in the first place. It will no doubt take a few more tries before I have the technique figured out.
A few things I have noticed:
1. Get the plastic hot enough so it sags several inches. Once it starts to drop, it goes fairly fast.
2. You need to move quickly after taking out of oven and placing on vacuum table. Pretty much have one shot at it. So I made side wall for locating frame so it is just a matter of stuffing it into a corner and dropping down onto the table/form.
3. When it is on the table, the heat gun does not provide enough heat for the vacuum to pull it the plastic tight to the form. I melted holes in the first two tries. I got better luck with using my hands (with gloves) to quickly work the plastic into tight spots. You only have a short time before the plastic gets hard.
4. It was easier for me to rough trim the outside of the shell and place it back on wood form and then use the heat gun on low power and heat a small area and hold it tight to the form until cool and then move to the next area. If you do not get into a hurry this works.
5. The area between the clevis ears does not form properly. I drilled a hole between the ears to put more vacuum in that area and it is better but now the vacuum makes a hole without completely pulling the plastic tight to the form. I can trim this once it is filled with epoxy but is not as neat looking as it should be.
6. I wonder if it is possible to have too much vacuum suction for a given hole size on the table. One two of the shells, the vacuum sucked plastic right through the hole. Thinking maybe smaller diameter holes and more of them. As I recall I used a .19 inch diameter drill when I made the table.
The first picture is vacuum table, form and the best of three tries.
Second picture is close up of best shell.
Third shows what happens with too much use of the heat gun.
I think I can salvage the first attempt. It should make a usable but ugly looking coil
Anyway that is my tale of coil making for today
Jerry
It's too bad you can't put the form in the oven under the plastic and let it just melt down over the form. I guess that's what the really high-end plastic forming devices do, combine oven and vacuum table. I like the low-tech approach, but clearly takes skill and practice.
I have to go make a grilled cheese sandwich now...
-SB
Comment
-
Originally posted by simonbaker View PostThanks Jerry (and Don) for excellent report on this subject and the various subtleties.
It's too bad you can't put the form in the oven under the plastic and let it just melt down over the form. I guess that's what the really high-end plastic forming devices do, combine oven and vacuum table. I like the low-tech approach, but clearly takes skill and practice.
I have to go make a grilled cheese sandwich now...
-SB
Jerry
Comment
-
-
Comment
-
Hi folks,
How do you keep the coils in place when pouring in the epoxy?
How about pouring it in in the peripheral area only on the first run and leave the overlapping section free. When the first cast is hard, then pouring the rest and hoping the best. Does the wet epoxy melt the dried one so that when casting in two phases we get a solid, one lump (instead of two blocks, which are not stuck together)?
Comment
Comment