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"Kirk Patton" wrote in
: Hi Rich, I have successfully repaired a couple of Mac faceplates by using the technique as you describe . . . the paint I used (though I haven't tried a bunch of different types) was Krylon spray semi-gloss black, squirted first into a small bottle (beware of vapors), and then applied to the glass via a Q-tip. The thin consistancy and fast drying seemed to work well . . . brush marks were completely avoided. The color match was quite acceptable, but the opacity wasn't . . . a patch of gaffer's tape (after the paint had cured for 24 hrs.) on top of the paint patch fixed this. I am going to give Krylon a try but as far as opacity is concerned, I think I would give it a few more coats of paint. I am afraid that the gaffers tape would react to the remaining coating. I have seen a few MI3 faceplates damaged as you described . . . I would guess that the bubbling at the edges was caused by a chemical reaction with the particular foam tape that was used for a time, as the problem seemed to become much less common in newer units . . . though maybe it was just because they were newer. Hard to say, but I think mine is a later unit as the original sale date was 12/26/68. I seem to recall that the last MI3 I saw had an open HT secondary as well, and one of the sources you mentioned had a replacement (of new manufacture) available. It wasn't exactly cheap . . . but way less than what finding an MPI-4 or pristene, working MI3 would be. But that was at least five years ago . . . It seems that the HV winding is quite prone to fail due to an open. Adding a voltage tripler to the remaining PS circuitry solves the problem. I have seen more than one reference to that sort of fix. I have also seen a problem with paint lifting on a number of Mac faceplates where the plastic light-diffuser is stuck on with 2-sided tape. Early versions of some units (C-26's seem to come to mind) had screws that held the light-diffuser to the panel endbrackets in addition to the tape; in later editions these screws were left out. I think that paint lifting was being caused by flexing/shifting of the panel bracket assembly relative to the faceplate (esp. on the units with the screws installed), and caused the paint to eventually lift. I recommend that you DO NOT install screws from the end brackets into the light-diffuser. I don't have a bracket of that nature and thanks for the tip. Hope this helps, Kirk Patton -- "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - ), "Technology and the Future" |
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