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Jamie Jamie is offline
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Default waxy plastic gear repair

Splork wrote:

On Mon, 29 Oct 2012 10:37:59 -0500, Jamie
t wrote:


N_Cook wrote:


isw wrote in message
]...


In article ,
Splork wrote:



My low tech pencil sharpener has a drive that uses a 2.2" gear to drive

the


mechanism from the motor. The gear broke into 3 pieces.

I can probably repair it but am unsure of the composition and what to

use for

cement/ strengthening.



Cut a groove around the perimeter, deep enough to get past the gear
teeth. Wrap a steel wire around the gear in the groove, and twist the
ends to make it tight. If cyanoacrylate will stick to the plastic, use
that to get the pieces assembled before you add the wire.

Isaac


Are you saying cut a slot through the middle of the teeth into the bulk
under the teeth?
I suspect a .4mm saw in a Dremmel would end up as a melted mess and not a
slot, perhaps a heated scalpel blade in a jig

Or perhaps use some nicrome wire with some silone sleeve at the overlap,
apply a weight and some adjustable current. Hope the wire melts into the
bulk of the plastic and perhaps ypu can ignore twisting off of the wire.
May need to recess 3 pins into the disc part , then swathe in hotmelt or
something, if the 3 sections have failed with smooth edges, before doing the
wire job



what is a waxy plastic gear? I can't picture any gears being made of wax
or material soft like wax?

Jamie



Thanks to all the replies!!

The unit is at least 20 years old.

The gear is brown Bakelite in color. I say waxy because it has a soapy feel and
I can scrape the material with my thumbnail and get some to come off. Like very
hard wax. Odd for a drive gear material so I suppose it changed in nature over
time. The exterior seems most changed so perhaps there is some material
strength remaining.

They call it micarta
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micarta

Jamie