Repair of spacers on a Shake Standard Professional
-
- Advanced Board Poster
- Posts: 303
- Joined: Sun Jan 01, 2006 5:00 pm
- Location: Deland, Florida
Repair of spacers on a Shake Standard Professional
Is ther any way to repair spacers that have cracked into on some of these reels. Are the spacers bakelite or plastic.
Bill
Bill
-
- Advanced Board Poster
- Posts: 419
- Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 4:52 pm
- Location: Caledonia,MI
Spacers/repair
I believe they are hard rubber, repair ? Don`t think so. . . glue and pressure ? Hope some more experienced one can advise you, I`m just
guessing.
guessing.
- Reelman
- Advanced Board Poster
- Posts: 344
- Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 3:58 pm
- Location: East Troy Pa.
- Contact:
I believe most of those spacers are made of early plastic. Plastic has a big problem with sun light and heat. Even a lot of the newer plastics can have the same problem. Except when they are made for sun light and heat. Even the plastic used in Shop Vac vacuums break down and become very brittle with less then a year in the sun and weather. As I found out when I took the reject tanks home and left them outside. And most plastics continue to shrink. As the spacers dry out over the years. Just looks at the early river runts. And as a lot of people that collect Shakespeare and South Bend as well as lots of other reels are know. There is no way to fix them short of putting a new spacers on. Sooner or later somebody is going to make molds for the spacers and new ones will made. And then we will be trying to figure out if the spacer on the reel in our hand will be a reproduction or original.
- john elder
- Star Board Poster
- Posts: 8541
- Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2003 2:44 pm
Are you talking about early Shakes with the dark brown inserts or are you talking about the later ones with "marbling"-type spacers? I believe that the early ones, as Jack indicated, are likely hard rubber and there is hope for at least stabilizing them with file shavings from an old sideplate, mixed with epoxy, followed by sanding and shaping. The plastic ones, as Reelman pointed out, get brittle and repair is problematic, to put politely. Slipping in a little clear epoxy is about the most you can do, I believe.
-
- Advanced Board Poster
- Posts: 303
- Joined: Sun Jan 01, 2006 5:00 pm
- Location: Deland, Florida
Probably hard rubber.
The spacers are dark black. The reel is a GS 1924 Standard Professional.
- john elder
- Star Board Poster
- Posts: 8541
- Joined: Mon Sep 22, 2003 2:44 pm
-
- Ultra Board Poster
- Posts: 1637
- Joined: Thu Oct 09, 2003 2:22 pm
- Location: Salisbury, NC
Those spacers are hard rubber. At any rate the following repair works well on either if it is only a clean break (no lost material). Clean the ring thourghly. Clean the area to be repaired with Dawn dishwashing detergent under running water and dry. Next, clean it with rubbing alcohol. Use a toothpick to work some Eastman 910 or one of the other "Miracle" adhesives into the crack. Use a nylon tie wrap around the outside to hold the crack closed. Allow to dry overnight. The adhesive will not stick to the nylon. Remove the tie wrap and polish smooth. You will not find the crack and it will be as strong as new.
Don
Don