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Water Block Design / Construction Building your own block? Need info on designing one? Heres where to do it

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Unread 07-27-2004, 08:53 AM   #26
|kbn|
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Brass :E
Costs more, might be easyer to machine but then so is plastic.
Why solder blocks? might seem better but its realy not worth the effort.
Main reson I dont like soldered blocks is its almost impossible to remove the oxidation on the inside, which happens when heating up. If I had to use brass top I would seal it using sillicone sealant or something, but not solder.

Plastic (polyethylene or polycarb) is so much easyer to machine and is quite easy to seal, so is best imo.
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Unread 07-27-2004, 03:09 PM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by |kbn|
Plastic (polyethylene or polycarb) is so much easyer to machine and is quite easy to seal, so is best imo.
Yes. A good quality chopping board costs little and is a joy to machine. Great for prototypes. The stuff also sands easily to the gloss of magazine paper. Metal grit and oil ruins its appearence though.

Brass is much stronger than copper. Purely structural elements (everything but the base) is better made of brass. You can use less metal that way.
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Unread 07-27-2004, 08:40 PM   #28
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Each brass top costs me $3.50NZ... ($1.75US)

Price isnt a factor.
When you figure in the fact im sealing with RTV silicon, and the fact that seperating the copper from the brass requires a chisel and hammer, with serious force you'd understand that brass is the better alternative Its a lot easier to make one top in brass, then move it to the next base, than crack every plastic top you try to remove
Also, i can plug the outlet of these blocks, and hook it up to garden hose pressure, and they dont leak (granted the hose is weak, but pulling off the garden hose from the inlet still makes a noise like a car tire popping)

That, and it looks better.
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Unread 07-28-2004, 06:00 AM   #29
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Brass has much higher bling factor than chopping boards.
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Unread 07-28-2004, 01:08 PM   #30
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Quote:
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Brass has much higher bling factor than chopping boards.
That's subjective, but I agree. Though you might be surprised how seductively new a crisply machined and polished translucent hunk of former chopping board can look. The resilience makes for excellent tapered thread seals, too (think vinyl lock nuts).
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Unread 07-28-2004, 01:56 PM   #31
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Pity my chopping board is glass, which IMO has a much higher bling factor for chopping boards than plastic, also it's much harder to scratch. Not very good for making blocks with though.
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Unread 07-31-2004, 05:16 PM   #32
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Quote:
Also, i can plug the outlet of these blocks, and hook it up to garden hose pressure, and they dont leak (granted the hose is weak, but pulling off the garden hose from the inlet still makes a noise like a car tire popping)
Garden hose = mains water pressure
Ive done the same using bluetak to seal a plastic top to copper base - with screws ofcourse
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Unread 07-31-2004, 07:37 PM   #33
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Yeah, mains pressure is a bit of an overstatement (i didnt want to use mains pressure as a term, as its really a lot weaker than that) because when the council was putting the mains down here they shared 5 houses from one of the water mains; its a very weak hose; still, with a complete block off, it does alright

Last edited by Etacovda; 07-31-2004 at 07:44 PM. Reason: houses
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