You could epoxy a piece of ceramic rod into two pieces of tube. One at both ends. One attached to the heated element and the other tube to the rod.
On 2013/06/24 07:40 PM, Viesturs La-cis wrote: > Hello! > > A client is asking me for a small machine that would burn their logo in > wooden parts. They want to do it with a heated element that would be > actuated by pneumatical cylinder. > > My only concern that I have not yet figured out is keeping down as much as > possible the amount of heat transfered to the rod of pneumatic cylinder. > > I would like to ask, if somebody has ever done something similar and could > share some tips about best practices how to attach that heated stencil to > pneumatic cylinder. > > My current thought is to take a piece of thin-walled pipe and machine the > wall in somewhat like a web (drill lots of holes or something similar). > That would reduce the crossection of material and thus the amount of heat > transfered to the rod of cylinder. > > I would like not to reinvent the wheel, so will appreciate any advices. > Thanks in advance! > -- Regards / Groete Marius D. Liebenberg MasterCut cc Cel: +27 82 698 3251 Tel: +27 12 743 6064 Fax: +27 86 551 8029 Skype: marius_d.liebenberg --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 130624-1, 2013/06/24 Tested on: 2013/06/24 07:54:53 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2013 AVAST Software. http://www.avast.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.net email is sponsored by Windows: Build for Windows Store. http://p.sf.net/sfu/windows-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users
