Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle? I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area, and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked. The plastic is brittle and reminds me of the aging ofplastic in 1990s plastic television cabinets. My 85s never did this and I have a very old 77 that is still in perfect shape although it doesn't get a of use. The 177 is my daily meter and yes, it's fallen a few times.
Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle?
I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area,
and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked.
On Tuesday, January 25, 2022 at 11:29:45 AM UTC-5, ohg...@gmail.com wrote:plastic in 1990s plastic television cabinets. My 85s never did this and I have a very old 77 that is still in perfect shape although it doesn't get a of use. The 177 is my daily meter and yes, it's fallen a few times.
Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle? I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area, and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked. The plastic is brittle and reminds me of the aging of
Sorry to hear.
I have 3 fluke multimeters: a 77(30 yo?), 179 (6-7 yo?), and 289 (~2 yo). None of them have the issues you describe. The 179 is my daily driver most of the time.
Surprising that the aging plastic issue would crop up on a Fluke.
For the inside post repair, you may want to consider, if there is enough space, to slide over a plastic sleeve filled with epoxy to reinforce it? Then use a slightly oversized screw?
Heat-shrink sleeve over post perhaps?
good luck
J
Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle? I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area, and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked. The plastic is brittle and reminds me of the aging ofplastic in 1990s plastic television cabinets. My 85s never did this and I have a very old 77 that is still in perfect shape although it doesn't get a of use. The 177 is my daily meter and yes, it's fallen a few times.
Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle? I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area, and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked. The plastic is brittle and reminds me of the aging ofplastic in 1990s plastic television cabinets. My 85s never did this and I have a very old 77 that is still in perfect shape although it doesn't get a of use. The 177 is my daily meter and yes, it's fallen a few times.
On Tue, 25 Jan 2022 08:29:42 -0800 (PST), "ohg...@gmail.com" <ohg...@gmail.com> wrote:plastic in 1990s plastic television cabinets. My 85s never did this and I have a very old 77 that is still in perfect shape although it doesn't get a of use. The 177 is my daily meter and yes, it's fallen a few times.
Anyone having an issue with Fluke cases getting brittle? I have a 177 that had the battery cover crack in the screw boss area, and the other side won't hold a screw as the inside post is cracked. The plastic is brittle and reminds me of the aging of
Any sources of ozone nearby, such as electric motors?
At some point in the past, it became necessary to put additives in the plastic to make it fire retardant. My guess(tm) is that this has
something to do with the crumbling plastic.
--
Jeff Liebermann je...@cruzio.com
PO Box 272 http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Ben Lomond CA 95005-0272
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
Generally, my approach to cracked cases of this nature is to clean thoroughly, add a generous bead of JB-Weld, right up to and including filling the screw holes, allowing it to cure, then drilling out the holes as needed Haven't lost a patient yet. Itmay not be the prettiest of cures, but it has the overwhelming virtue of working well.
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
Generally, my approach to cracked cases of this nature is to clean thoroughly, add a generous bead of JB-Weld, right up to and including filling the screw holes, allowing it to cure, then drilling out the holes as needed Haven't lost a patient yet. Itmay not be the prettiest of cures, but it has the overwhelming virtue of working well.
Peter Wieck
Melrose Park, PA
If you have a 3D printer, you could make a replacement battery cover
(or have someone make one for you):
<https://www.yeggi.com/q/fluke+meter/> <https://cults3d.com/en/tags/fluke%20multimeter> <https://mito3d.com/en/3dmodels/search/fluke/all/all/latest/1>
I didn't see anything specific for the 177, but I might have missed
it.
--
Jeff Liebermann je...@cruzio.com
PO Box 272 http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Ben Lomond CA 95005-0272
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
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