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Default Fixing a broken sliding catch for a cooker hood

Hi,

I need a bodge fix for a cooker hood sliding catch. I haven't been
able to find replacements online. The cooker hood is 15 years old but
works fine. The hood is a “tilting” type. When the hood is opened a
small spring switch is depressed which switches on the hood. The hood
was originally prevent from coming completely out of its track by two
small plastic sliders on the hood that went through slots in the metal
of the hood.. These sliders stayed in place because the plastic had a
small groove and lips that overlapped the metal on the front and back.
However, these lips have fractured and both sliders just fall out of
the slot. Without the catches, the hood can be opened (easily) too far
and the hood door falls (dramatically) to the floor.
Now, I want to avoid replacing the whole hood because 1) apart from
these catches the hood works fine as an extractor 2) I can't afford
the time to dismantle and replace the whole hood.
Now I have though of using epoxy resin to fix some extra bits of
plastic to the front and back of the sliders but recently I haven't
had a great deal of success with epoxy resin forming a permanent bond
between surfaces. Should I use a different glue between plastics
surfaces? Anything else I could try to fix these catches?

Thanks

Clive
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Default Fixing a broken sliding catch for a cooker hood


"Clive" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I need a bodge fix for a cooker hood sliding catch. I haven't been
able to find replacements online. The cooker hood is 15 years old but
works fine. The hood is a “tilting” type. When the hood is opened a
small spring switch is depressed which switches on the hood. The hood
was originally prevent from coming completely out of its track by two
small plastic sliders on the hood that went through slots in the metal
of the hood.. These sliders stayed in place because the plastic had a
small groove and lips that overlapped the metal on the front and back.
However, these lips have fractured and both sliders just fall out of
the slot. Without the catches, the hood can be opened (easily) too far
and the hood door falls (dramatically) to the floor.
Now, I want to avoid replacing the whole hood because 1) apart from
these catches the hood works fine as an extractor 2) I can't afford
the time to dismantle and replace the whole hood.
Now I have though of using epoxy resin to fix some extra bits of
plastic to the front and back of the sliders but recently I haven't
had a great deal of success with epoxy resin forming a permanent bond
between surfaces. Should I use a different glue between plastics
surfaces? Anything else I could try to fix these catches?

Thanks

Clive

Just make a couple of new ones

Its not as though they are visible unless you put your head inside the hood
at least mine weren't

IIRC I did mine with a couple of bits of aluminium I had laying around and
some small pop rivets to hold together 2 strips with a thinner shim
sandwiched in between to make the groove

Tony


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