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I changed the grain of wheat number board lights to leds. I’m having a issue selling the light from entering the cab. Tried tape and other means. The situation is increased by the light shing through the botto edge of the windshield. The windshield then acts as a light pipe. I found nothing satisfactory. Any tips?

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Last edited by shawn
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Silly Putty 😁 Aroma Putty 🍋 Power Putty✊ Mounting putty for walls anyhow as Silly Puttys may flow too easy when warm. Power Putty Ive not played with much. Pretty easy to remove as is. Alcohol will break them down. Paint the edge of the window facing the lights. I like silver on black for light blocking. The Liquid E. Tape would be great for that , but thicker. High heat silicone red/black .
trnluvr posted:

Black silicone?

Doug

Many, not all,  forms of silicone caulk, sealant, glue release acetic acid during the cure not a very good substance to have around electronics.  If the uncured silicone has a vinegar smell don't use it around electronics.   Another good reason for Liquid Tape over silicone is it skins over faster than silicone.   One technique I use to seal off light spill from LEDs is to cover them with black heat shrink so the light can only come out the end of the tube.                     j

Last edited by JohnActon
IMG_0482IMG_0482IMG_0481IMG_0481gunrunnerjohn posted:

If I want to really hide the light in the back, I just slip black heatshrink over the LED and then seal the rear.  If you use the flangeless LED's, the tubing slips right over.

John,

Tried a bunch of things before trying the liquid tape. Which would have been the last resort. What worked best was the black foam sticky back paper that you once recommended for smok gaskets. I cut the form out using the shell as a pattern. Then took the window out. I forced the stick foam up toward the front of the cab.

Then stuck it down to the pcb. It's great the foam is sort of forming....then put the window back which helps a bit to hold it in place.

 

 

 

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Foam may react to plastic contact. If you haven't used it with plastic before, keep a good eye on it; especially the very near future at first, but regularly for a year or so, and long term too.

Foam can't be fully trusted anymore imo. This foam failure brings my total loss from bad foam suppliers to about $3g this century, about $300 of it in bad tapes and weather strips. This foam was once black (Harman Kardon this time). 

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Infinity studio monitors too. I could add a half dozen speakers actually. Only two have bit me persinally, but they were not cheap versions made for Sears, etc. but the true audiophile versions.

 Ive had dealership foam core fuel pump seals melt in seconds after contact with fuel too...

I.e., IMO foams can't be trusted blindly unless maybe you mixed it yourself, only tested and watched. (there are refoam kits for speakers sure, but I paid for quality I didn't get for long. I have speakers made in the 40s sounding better now 😒)

Adriatic posted:

Infinity studio monitors too. I could add a half dozen speakers actually. Only two have bit me persinally, but they were not cheap versions made for Sears, etc. but the true audiophile versions.

 Ive had dealership foam core fuel pump seals melt in seconds after contact with fuel too...

I.e., IMO foams can't be trusted blindly unless maybe you mixed it yourself, only tested and watched. (there are refoam kits for speakers sure, but I paid for quality I didn't get for long. I have speakers made in the 40s sounding better now 😒)

Forget foam surrounds. In anything higher than 40% humidity they will attract mold which will eat them.  If you cannot find cloth reinforced rubber, to fit your speakers, make your own. Here is a link.          j

http://boomboxery.com/forum/in...undbetter-than-foam/

 

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