Covering up extra holes on enclosure..any ideas?

Started by mth5044, July 02, 2009, 07:14:09 AM

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Joe Hart

I just needed to "cover" some air vents in a recycled enclosure.  I used a sheet of stiff plastic (cut from some packaging for an electric razor), covered one side with sticky foil tape (found on the side of the road a while back -- I think it's the stuff that AC guys use for ductwork), then placed it inside the enclosure covering the offending holes and taped it on with more of the foil tape from the inside.  So when you look at the vents, all you see is shiny metal rather than my cruddy rat's nest wiring job!  Does this make sense the way I described it?  I think it looks pretty nifty.
-Joe Hart

FlyingZ

Quote from: WLS on July 02, 2009, 12:35:54 PM
Quote from: FlyingZ on July 02, 2009, 11:26:53 AM
Don't know about JB Weld but I'm certain bondo doesn't conduct electricity. I got noise through an old power plug hole next to a volume pot before.


If it's a metal box that conducts electricity then what difference would it make  ???

Bill

Shielding  :icon_rolleyes:

bside2234

Put the status led in the hole and the switch where the led was going to go.

trendyironicname

Quote from: Electric Warrior on July 02, 2009, 05:14:03 PM
drill some more holes, paint it yellow and call it the "swiss cheese pedal"  :icon_mrgreen:


haha, that's great
There are 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary, and those who don't.

WLS

Quote from: FlyingZ on July 02, 2009, 07:39:42 PM
...
Shielding  :icon_rolleyes:


Then wouldn't that be true with any plastic based filler? (Bondo)

But don't you have more interference with a plastic box VS a metal box?

At least from what I have read plastic enclosures require shielding in most applications. Metal boxes it is not as much of an issue.

So if JB Weld has a partial metal base wouldn't that respectively be better?


Bill





Since I've breadboarded it I can only blame myself.

But It's Just A Chip!

mth5044

From what I understand, you can be OK with a plastic enclosure as long as there is no gain stages.. or something like that.

rnfr

i've put fuse holder caps in my  holes before.  looks cool, and makes people wonder-"WTF?", too!

Paul Marossy

Quote from: MikeH on July 02, 2009, 04:37:16 PM
I've used JB weld or bondo or whatever, and 9 times out of 10 the "plug" ends up coming loose and I get a circular crack through the finish.  I think the fill needs to be anchored to the enclosure better, maybe with a small piece of screen, or just a major wad of the stuff on the inside behind the fill.

That's why I put a thin piece of metal under the hole(s). I attach it the enclosure with Super Glue, and then fill it with JB Weld. When I get it right, you can't tell at all where the hole was and I haven't had any problems with cracking or anything else. But, yeah, just JB Weld in the hole with no support underneath it is iffy...

Strategy

I needed a large-ish (9.5" L) enclosure for my Stage Center Reverb. the board, wiring and tank fit perfectly inside a DIY MIDI controller I had dismantled. Of course, the front panel had 14 holes and two slider slots! I had to cover up all these holes.

I work for landscape architects and I was throwing away a bunch of office crap and came across a REAL WOOD veneer product with adhesive backing. It's a 3M product, though I haven't gotten to source it new. I used this to cover the faceplate, and it was easy to work with and took wood stain pretty nicely. Definitely beats fake wood sticker paper. Gives your pedal that "early 80s station wagon" look, only better :-) I can't post a pic as I'm on vacation now...

The 3M website is a nightmare to search, as one might expect...I have a feeling that calling the local model/hobby shop will yield better results

- Strategy

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Br4d13y

freedom is the freedom to say 2+2=4

FlyingZ

Quote from: WLS on July 03, 2009, 02:39:13 AM
Quote from: FlyingZ on July 02, 2009, 07:39:42 PM
...
Shielding  :icon_rolleyes:


Then wouldn't that be true with any plastic based filler? (Bondo)

But don't you have more interference with a plastic box VS a metal box?

At least from what I have read plastic enclosures require shielding in most applications. Metal boxes it is not as much of an issue.

So if JB Weld has a partial metal base wouldn't that respectively be better?


Bill






Yes

scratch

you never actually mentioned how big the hole is, if it's in the 1/4" range, how about a screw/bolt and nut? I do that for some smaller holes, for larger one you can get 'fender' washers which are large diameter but only a small hole in the centre ...
Denis,
Nothing witty yet ...

tranceracer

Maybe sink hole covers or similar like this from any hardware store:

doitle

Quote from: Br4d13y on July 04, 2009, 12:30:27 AM
add a "burst" button ;D
Add that and then have people play it and see if they can hear the "Subtle" difference... If they can't tell them their ears aren't "Trained" enough and they'll probably be like "oh OHHHHHHHHHHH... I hear it now that is much better without the burst engaged it is almost unplayable but with burst on it sounds great!"

:P

Myriad Society

If none of the ideas mentioned already will work for you and you are still stuck with a "vent hole", you can go to the harware store and find some stiff, fine mesh screen material - the screens used for some kitchen faucet aerators work pretty well. If you want to be creative, you can even dome the center of the screen a tad bit into the hole from inside the enclosure and then bend the remaining screen material back flush to the enclosure area surrounding the hole, but just laying the screen flat across the hole will work fine. Now just JB Weld around the perimeter of the hole so that the screen is bonded in place covering the hole.

This will obscure direct sight to your wiring and will make your extra hole look purposeful. If anyone asks what it's for, you can tell them it's a sound hole meant to improve the acoustic respose of the pedal or something like that.
Extended warranty...how can I lose!

earthtonesaudio

I think you should glue a rock in there.  Just 'cause.

WLS

You could get a child's five star jack and glue it as if it is coming out of the hole.

Jack In The Box :)


Bill


Since I've breadboarded it I can only blame myself.

But It's Just A Chip!