Personally, I like additional lubricants in certain scenarios...![]()
Hey if it aint natural... Maybe take your time getting to those scenarios
Hehe
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Personally, I like additional lubricants in certain scenarios...![]()
Hey if it aint natural... Maybe take your time getting to those scenarios
Hehe
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I concur. The characteristic you're after is something that prevents oxidation and other forms of corrosion, and blobbing it on is pointless. The stuff I'm using is thin, runny liquid that dries to an invisible, not-sticky film. It keeps my guns from rusting 200' from the ocean at my place in Florida, so I know it works well. The same stuff also kept my brass Zippos shinier than any other product I ever tried. I wet the end of a Q-Tip with it and apply to it to all the contact points of my DiBi, let it sit on there for a bit, then wipe off any excess.dielectric grease is fine, even noloax is non conductive. they don't need to be. the contact area will displace the film thickness to nothing where it contacts when the button is pressed. the whole point of the grease is to keep the whole surface from oxidizing, even where it doesn't contact. I use noloax mainly right after I sand a connection point, wipe a dab on and then wipe most of it back off. I leave enough so the surface is wetted with it but not much more, any more don't do anything but make a mess. what happens is microscopically all the sanding scratches make valleys and grooves, these valleys never make contact, only the high points do but the valleys inside the scratches will oxidize and the oxidation spreads to the high points which do make contact. the grease fills these microscopic valleys and grooves and really slows down how fast the oxidation comes back. high polished silver or gold plated don't really need this but if it's a little wet with it it don't hurt. I usually sand m battery ends with 1,200 wetted with a light oil or wd40, then wipe dry with a paper towel, dab a bit of noloax, wipe most of it back off then throw it back into rotation. you just want to wet the contact with it, not put a blob. the blob will just get mostly displaced and make a mess
If you can't find those pieces you can always glue together what you have, fill the remaining space with a permanent, hard epoxy, and sand down til you cap fits flush.
Now THATS a battle scar!
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don't alter anything til we talk, tim. let's explore all options before removing any material.
that sucks. if you can find all the pieces it can go back together again good as new, if not then maybe a replacement piece can be made and grafted in, filling it with epoxy would be a last resort and would look like crap I think, you really should try to find all the pieces if that's at all possible. I know what you mean about left it as is until.... I usually do the same, pick up the pieces and then wait till I have the time and patience for a good repair, for as many times as mine has been broken it still looks perfect when refinished after a repair
one time I was in a rush and I used the gel instead of the liquid when I broke the top cap part off around the button, the gel does not fully displace so it will leave a slight gap in the material... actually not leave a gap because it fills the gap, but things don't go back to 100% flush as they were when the gel is used so it creates a filled gap, it can be sanded to flat and invisible still but now my button hole looks very slightly elongated when looking at it straight down from the top because I used the gel there on that repair, def use the loctite professional liquid one that pdib recommends for an invisible repair provided you do find all the pieces. I've only showed pics here of the one break but I have broken it a bunch of times now in a few different places![]()
I need to refinish it again because right now I've got 2 different repaired areas that need to be sanded out and polished again. I really should build a rubber sleeve housing for it or just leave it home when I'm at work but I like using it too much, I did leave it home for a while but it's back at work again with me now, blowing clouds with a dual 26 ga at .4 ohms, cracks? what cracks? I don't taste any cracks in the vape![]()
Oh no... so sorry that happened to you. But you if you could find all the pieces, gluing it back together would make it stronger than it was before too...
Ok, I bowed to all your bullying and cleaned the grease out of the button. Actually, there was almost no grease in the button, since pushing on it squished most of it out anyway when the spring compressed, but I cleaned out what was left. Then I narrowed the spring a bit at the top, so it would fit better inside the button. It is firing better now. It's still a very stiff push.
And it still doesn't hit as hard at my Reo Grand with the kit... so I'm thinking maybe there's still something wrong with it. But all the posts are in the correct positions, so I'm stumped on what's left to check.
Tim I'm so sorry this happened to you. I don't know what to say to make you feel better other than it'll get fixed somehow and be good as new.
Sent from a BIG phone.....Galaxy Note 3

the truth is, wood is wood. my wood was stabilized and it's a pretty good block but still, where it broke each time is at thin areas, don't think that another wood would be so much better tbh, the dibi is not good to drop and abuse, it's minimalist in form and sleek and thin but it is wood and that area where yours broke is not going to survive a good fall landing right on the toe, any wood could have broke so don't beat yourself up too much about the wood you chose bro, just find those pieces![]()
Thanks glass. I wasn't tryin to bully, I was just sharing my opinion. Grease will attract lint/drit/etc and eventually get in the way of making good contact. That was all I was trying to convey. I think alot of times we all use a product because we think it will do something it doesn't do or wasn't meant to do. I think there are better products for limiting oxidation on metal contacts; like what Rossum shared a few posts back or deoxit. Something thin that isn't goopy. Noalox on a reo with old firing pin was to stop the arcing, which was causing rapid/immediate oxidation.
So when you fire the mod, is your pinky under the bottom plate? Like squeezing a fist full of vape? Are you sure you got all of the coating off in the button hole? Maybe turn your button around 20-30 times in a circle and see if it improves? Also make sure that spring is wrapped tight around the aluminum button post making good contact and make sure where spring is contacting button shaft is clean.