Full Version: UV Epoxy not Just for Doming

From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#1]
 8 May 2004
To: ALL

"Necessity is the mother of invention"

I didn't invent those words, but I'm a firm believer.

Case in point:

I was engraving numbers on walkie-talkies one day and made the mistake of putting a previously-engraved radio back into the engraving machine and engraved another number on top of the unit.

Yikes! What do you do now?

Basically, there are two solutions:

1. Replace the plastic housing and start over. Not very expensive, but time consuming. Especially if you know nothing about walike-talkies.

2. Re-engrave the number, above or below the mistake, and route-out the error, which leaves a rectangular recess. Not very pretty.

Wait! There's a third solution:

3. Use a rigid UV cure epoxy, the same as that used for epoxy doming.

What you do, is carefully fill the mis-engraved area with epoxy. You then take a business card and squeegee the the epoxy to "surface level." Wipe off any excess epoxy that surrounds engraving.

You can either put the item into a UV curing unit, or do what I do - Let Mother Nature take over. Let the epoxy cure for about 20 minutes in the sun.

The result is a re-engravable surface. Since the plastic housing of the walkie is a solid color (usually black) and the epoxy is clear, simply engrave the item with the correct wording/lettering and color-fill.

If the misengraved letter/number occupies the same space as the new engraving, say changing a "6" to a "9", the "botch" is virtually undetectable.

I hate to pull the wool over my customers eyes, but what they don't see won't hurt them :-)

Try it, you'll like it.

David "The Stunt Engraver" Lavaneri
DGL Engraving
Port Hueneme, CA


From: Ward (STENSONENG) [#2]
 11 May 2004
To: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#1] 11 May 2004

David, I must admit I've ignored the epoxy doming process and know
nothing about it. Do you have a HTML ? to learn more about it? Being
an "old know nothing" means I have sometimes failed to pay attention when I should have, because I didn't have immediate need to know.


From: Administrator (ADMIN) [#3]
 11 May 2004
To: Ward (STENSONENG) [#2] 12 May 2004

There is a doming article at www.dyesub.org written by Terry Morris who domes himself and is now in the business of selling supplies/equipment.

From: Stunt Engraver (DGL) [#4]
 11 May 2004
To: Ward (STENSONENG) [#2] 12 May 2004

Ward,

Terry Morris has web site that describes the process.

www.ultradome.com

David "The Stunt Engraver" Lavaneri
DGL Engraving
Port Hueneme, CA


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