would you have to use a low temp hot glue gun on it? The heat of a normal glue gun would melt the plastic.Mr. Badwrench wrote:I've found that CA doesn't allow the fibers to flex. They become brittle at the glue joint, and the tension from the curved fiber trying to straighten itself out is enough to break it off. Some folks have recommended 5 minute epoxy, but as in your case, that wouldn't work for me. So I used hot glue. It doesn't get hot enough to damage the fiber, it works well for attaching single fibers or bundles, you can use it to attach fibers directly to an LED, and best of all it remains flexible, allowing the fiber to bend without breaking.
Fiber Optics and Super-glue?
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CA was frowned upon at sci-fi u. Just use some water based glue and bundle fibers in a tube affixed to a LED. If you are fast you might heat the fiber and pull into a hole and let it melt to it, I guess. Best to counter sink and add water based glue--or so it was said.Slave1 wrote:would you have to use a low temp hot glue gun on it? The heat of a normal glue gun would melt the plastic.Mr. Badwrench wrote:I've found that CA doesn't allow the fibers to flex. They become brittle at the glue joint, and the tension from the curved fiber trying to straighten itself out is enough to break it off. Some folks have recommended 5 minute epoxy, but as in your case, that wouldn't work for me. So I used hot glue. It doesn't get hot enough to damage the fiber, it works well for attaching single fibers or bundles, you can use it to attach fibers directly to an LED, and best of all it remains flexible, allowing the fiber to bend without breaking.
- SGluedMyFingers
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One more classic example: Note the winner of Starshipmodeler's Star Wars Contest in the "Kits" division.
<bad link>
Mr. Wurth states that he lost 20% of his fibers due to damage from CA.
A very nice model - but could have been nicer. OOPS!
<bad link>
Mr. Wurth states that he lost 20% of his fibers due to damage from CA.
A very nice model - but could have been nicer. OOPS!
Last edited by SGluedMyFingers on Tue Dec 06, 2005 12:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Marcal -Marcal wrote:I would definitively do so, better now than when you cannot undo it. When I first fix my very first FO with super glue and I saw what happens I redid it again with epoxy at once.
I read your posts, than jumped to your bench & site!
What a great site -
Im trying to light Star Wars models but your stuff is beautiful & relevant!
Thank You for all the effort you put in photoing your site, and building the models and explaining the circuits & lighting.
I love it...
Thank you
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firemann816
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firemann816 at hotmail dot com
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firemann816
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firemann816 at hotmail dot com
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Here is what I got when I used pheneal seal to attach the fiber optics... I had to use globs of it to secure the fiber strand. On the plus side, it was flexable enough to allow for bending, but on the negative side, it had some trouble sticking to the painted surface ( I had sprayed the inside silver for reflectivity). Hence, the need for large blobs of it.
It was easy to smooth onto both the kit and the FO; but I think that the FO should be be slightly buffed to give this chalking materal a slightly rough surface to attach to. I recall having some issue with this stuff holding onto the FO, but it did keep it in place.
It was easy to smooth onto both the kit and the FO; but I think that the FO should be be slightly buffed to give this chalking materal a slightly rough surface to attach to. I recall having some issue with this stuff holding onto the FO, but it did keep it in place.
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