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Deadly hot glue gun
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angelcruiz:

--- Quote from: NiHaoMike on February 03, 2021, 02:47:15 am ---If the rest of the gun works well, I would opt for replacing the heater with a low voltage cartridge heater of the kind used in 3D printers, then add a temperature sensor and microcontroller as a PID controller. It would heat up really fast and have the option of being battery operated.

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Good idea for a fun little project  :-+


--- Quote from: james_s on February 03, 2021, 02:52:45 am ---
--- Quote from: Benta on February 02, 2021, 11:39:51 pm ---Cheapness has it's own price. I hope you've learned this now.

Buying quality is one moment of frustration (price) and decades of happiness.
Buying crap is one moment of happiness (price) and a time of frustration afterwards (no reason to mention decades here...)

--- End quote ---

The problem is that once cheap stuff floods the market, everybody else cheapens their offerings to compete, or to extract all the profit they can from an established brand before the reputation crumbles. It's hard to know what you're getting anymore.

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Absolutely. In Amazon, for example, the first two pages are full of crappy guns like mine for under 20$. Same shit, different shape.


--- Quote from: coppercone2 on February 03, 2021, 07:00:26 am ---https://surebonder.com/products/pro2-60mil-60-watt-18-volt-cordless-professional-heavy-duty-full-size-hot-glue-gun-milwaukee%C2%AE-version

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Looks nice. At 60W it should melt the glue pretty fast.

Thanks!


amyk:
The expensive ones are probably the same in construction, only better in quality control.

The insulation may have been fine at the factory test, and then the debris slowly punctured through after cycles of thermal expansion/contraction. Either way it is not difficult to renew the insulator.

IMHO the fact that the tip is hot(!), so you wouldn't normally touch it anyway, makes any real hazard rather low.
coppercone2:
thats how you get a unsafe product, you add a whole bunch of 'user would probobly'

The user ends up doing everything possible.

Here is one, some kid has glue dripping on his arts and crafts, so he gets a butter knife from the kitchen to scrape off the excess glue so the next joint can be made cleaner. The only worry in his mind is to clean the knife after so his mom does not yell at him. Great idea, its polished metal, should clean easily, won't scratch anything. It's not even that unsafe that he would get yelled at from using since its dull.

Hmm, its not coming out, maybe a paper clip would work. How many people that buy this super cheap shit have a set of picks and nice insulated handle or ceramic tools? Or, maybe I can get some glue on this paper clip so I can make a very small bond if I am fast enough.  :scared: Paper clips and pins ARE the #1 object that would be around a hot glue gun. Wow cool school themed art project with office supplies... the crappy guns drip so hard you practically apply the stuff like sheet rock compound.

I spend a little extra around electrical tools that might be around water or excess heat. Angle grinder (hot welds, gas flames), automotive buffer/polisher (you are working on a car in the yard and hosing constantly during/after working), metal saw (so many jagged edges while doing thin metal work). The car buffer bothers me the most because the procedure is to drape the thing over your shoulder while working on a wet car.. defiantly worth a little extra for the safety. Hot glue gun feels like a good candidate for this too because the tool usually weighs like a few ounces and its connected to a mains cord. The cheap ones feel like they are on a spring because they are so light and the cords suck so much.
ConKbot:
Coppercone actually knocking it out of the park there. My go-to for cleaning off a glue gun tip is a utility knife, and plenty of those are die-cast metal, and even the plastic ones can have a metal button and  spring for the retract mechanism.
station240:

--- Quote from: wraper on February 02, 2021, 11:29:23 pm ---Seems like some metal debris got in and then pressed into insulation by that removed clamp.

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That aluminium clamp looks like it was made using CNC, or like milling process.
The metal debris was left inside that metal shaped, which was then pressed into the coil.

Removing all metal debris is a vital part of making electronics and electrical devices.
Yet time and time again, we get junk with floating solder balls and screws, metal swarf in everything from enclosures to lithium battery cell casings.

The entire hotglue gun itself is unsafe, for AC mains anyway. The only part correctly built is the LED, the rest of the connections are soldered, unsecured and uninsulated, the fuse is a joke too.
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