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#1
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Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and
circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie |
#2
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"Charlie" wrote in message
... Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie Go to your local (Bowling) Trophy engraver. Rich S. |
#3
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Rich is right on with this one. I had the local Trophy engraver do my
panel and she did a great job, bill was 80 bucks, I gave her a 50 dollar tip... Well worth it. !!!!!!!!!!!! Ben www.haaspowerair.com Rich S. wrote: "Charlie" wrote in message ... Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie Go to your local (Bowling) Trophy engraver. Rich S. |
#4
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Charlie wrote:
Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie http://www.horizonsisg.com/products/alumajet.asp |
#5
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How about rub on lettering? Available at many places...you might try
Wal Mart or an arts and craft store or even on-line ( http://www.nextag.com/Chartpak--900834/brand-html ) You can spray clear coat over the panel when you are finished applying the lettering to keep them from getting rubbed off. Scott Charlie wrote: Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie |
#6
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![]() What about Officemax of Office depot? |
#7
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![]() What about Officemax of Office depot? Both can get it done for you. Staples can also get it done for you, and so can your local Mom-and-Pop office supply. However, I would rather go directly to the engraver. If the aircraft is purely day VFR, or the placard is only for something like the warning notice for an amateur built aircraft, then a trip to the local engraver is probably all you'll ever need. OTOH, there is an entire science in backlighted engraved panels. At the time that I left the avionics business, the backlighted panels still all used incandescent lamps--many of which were weed lights--and there was a significant amount of work performed in replacing lamps and touching up panels at annual on aircraft such as King Airs. At that time (circa 1986) red or yellow LEDs were cheap, green cost money, blue was expensive, and white did not exist. Today, white leds are quite affordable by aircraft standards, draw little power and run cold, and are far more reliable than incandescents--so there could be an interesting project in back lighted panels. Alternatively, if the aircraft is to fly at night or during civil twilight, at least make the labels oversize--because switches and breakers are frequently a long distance (and shallow angle) below the "eyebrow" lights. Peter |
#8
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My way to do panels is to paint the panel, then make up your lettering on
the computer using a word processor. Then all you have to do is lay the paper over the painted surface, and wet it down with clear epoxy. The paper becomes transparent, and the panel looks really good. "Scott" wrote in message .. . How about rub on lettering? Available at many places...you might try Wal Mart or an arts and craft store or even on-line ( http://www.nextag.com/Chartpak--900834/brand-html ) You can spray clear coat over the panel when you are finished applying the lettering to keep them from getting rubbed off. |
#9
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Charlie wrote:
Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie Would it be more professional looking to get laser engraved plastic stuff from a trophy shop? |
#10
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Charlie wrote:
Hi, I would like to make professional looking placards for the switches and circuit breakes in my homebuilt. I have searched the 3M web pages for a product I heard they have, but have not been able to locate it. Does anyone have any ideas for making the placards and a source for the materials? Charlie I just did a fairly nice, multicolored placard for my switch panel by stealing Jim Weir's circuit board construction idea. Draw the panel on your computer then make a mirror image. Print it out on cheap inkjet paper with a color laser printer. If your wife doesn't have one for her real-estate business, you can do it at a copy shop for $0.30 (or at work if you don't let 'em catch you at it). Wipe the aluminum surface down with MEK then iron the print onto the aluminum. Set the iron to the hottest setting, go slow, and make sure you get everything good and hot. Rub it in hard, too. Let it cool completely before moving it, then soak it for and hour or two in warm, soapy water to remove the paper. The laser ink is just a plastic that you melt onto the paper and then the placard. A coating of clearcoat of some sort wont' make babies cry either. Your imagination is now the limit. |
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