Antique Switches
By Karl Petersen
If the original design is safe, it would stand to reason to rebuild the switch as original if a new or new-old-stock replacement could not be found. The concept of originality in a true restoration exceeds the normal bounds of practicality and availability. Unfortunately that also prices true restorations out of the hands of hobbyists and into the museum and serious collector realm.
Plastic or other moldings are a true challenge. One of the most frustrating metal parts to replicate might be an eyelet, since exacting tooling is needed to crimp them properly, but the eyelets themselves can often be obtained since the nominal sizes have not changed in years.
I am still wondering what switch designs we are talking about here, since I have yet to have an automatic instrument with a defective switch (lucky, eh?). As Craig and others have said, show me what you're having problems with and I'd be interested in helping find a suitable form, fit and function replacement if that is what is required.
Karl Petersen
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(Message sent Thu 15 Aug 1996, 02:47:55 GMT, from time zone GMT-0600.) |
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