High-Stress Plastic Parts: Made to Fail
Posted: Wed Mar 13, 2013 10:25 pm
CPS triggers aren't the only one. In the attached photo is also a cracked/bent trigger assembly arm from my Tiger Shark. (Let me know if the image is too large.)
I think we need better solutions for these. The conventional repair is to epoxy a sheet metal strip to the broken parts to hold them together, but let's be honest; this doesn't work that well and chances are that you'll have to make the same repair within a few years anyway. Although if done right, that conventional repair can last quite a while.
I repaired a BBT spring catch from their dart shooting Rapid Fire Tek blaster earlier by stacking properly cut/shaped sheet metal pieces together so that there's thickness. (I had to also supplement the plunger's teeth with sheet metal because plastic against metal simply doesn't work.) This repair has gone remarkably well, but trigger pieces are a bit more complicated and arguably more difficult to cut out and make. Still, I think it's clear that we need an all-metal solution for a lot of these sorts of parts, although I'm open to using plastic if it's something durable.
I'd love to just CAD these parts out and run them off a 3D fabricator, but I don't know if any printing solutions that are within my budget are suitable for that. Lots of printed plastics are weak. However, I think it's clear that 3D fabrication will be the future of our repairs. Perhaps if I invested in it and provided a service here and to the NIC, I could offset the costs of getting a decent solution, but I don't have time for that.
In the meantime, I will just sit and ponder, I guess. I've found that cracked plastic is stubborn when trying to shape it, until you snap the thing apart by hand so that it can be connected straight.
Edit: Shrinked the pic.
Old one is still here: http://www.waterwar.net/site_wwn/board/ ... php?id=349 , not sure how to delete old/unused/unneeded attachments from the server.
I think we need better solutions for these. The conventional repair is to epoxy a sheet metal strip to the broken parts to hold them together, but let's be honest; this doesn't work that well and chances are that you'll have to make the same repair within a few years anyway. Although if done right, that conventional repair can last quite a while.
I repaired a BBT spring catch from their dart shooting Rapid Fire Tek blaster earlier by stacking properly cut/shaped sheet metal pieces together so that there's thickness. (I had to also supplement the plunger's teeth with sheet metal because plastic against metal simply doesn't work.) This repair has gone remarkably well, but trigger pieces are a bit more complicated and arguably more difficult to cut out and make. Still, I think it's clear that we need an all-metal solution for a lot of these sorts of parts, although I'm open to using plastic if it's something durable.
I'd love to just CAD these parts out and run them off a 3D fabricator, but I don't know if any printing solutions that are within my budget are suitable for that. Lots of printed plastics are weak. However, I think it's clear that 3D fabrication will be the future of our repairs. Perhaps if I invested in it and provided a service here and to the NIC, I could offset the costs of getting a decent solution, but I don't have time for that.
In the meantime, I will just sit and ponder, I guess. I've found that cracked plastic is stubborn when trying to shape it, until you snap the thing apart by hand so that it can be connected straight.
Edit: Shrinked the pic.
Old one is still here: http://www.waterwar.net/site_wwn/board/ ... php?id=349 , not sure how to delete old/unused/unneeded attachments from the server.