Well, I know this isn't really an electronics question but I know a lot of guys here have experience in full project construction, including mechanics, molding and model making, so thought I would just ask here. If its the wrong place, my apologies.
I am trying to make a small tilt sensor with adjustable angle. This will be a 'yes/no' type affair with a sounder, and to keep things simple I've decided on a tilt switch as opposed to using accelerometers and a micro. After being disappointed with non-mercury switches - the ever bouncy 'ball in a tube' job - I got hold of some small mercury switches that of course still bounce, but at an acceptable level.
In order to make it adjustable for the user - range about 45 degree's - I thought I could simply glue this to a trim-pot. The trimmer is used purely as a small turntable with friction to hold it in place, and to allow the user to use a small flat-head screwdriver to adjust it as necessary. As I mentioned before, absolute angle is not necessary - they can adjust it until the sensor beeps at the correct angle.
As its a very small glass tube (3.3x8mm) full of mercury, I am wondering if certain glues may crack this as they shrink. I even thought about encasing it all in hotmelt glue, but thats probably over complicating matters.
So, the question. I have epoxy (JB weld, JB plastic), super glue (don't think it could take the torsion) and hot melt. Do you think any general purpose adhesive will be ok? As it will be turned, the wires from the switch may provide a bit of pull, so if the user turns the pot with too much force, I don't want the mercury switch to shear off (as I suspect will happen with super glue) so a rubbery adhesive might be better, thus the hot melt. The trim-pots I am using are old skeleton types where the mechanical parts are metal, so we're talking metal to glass tube - not a neat fit.
I always ask such convoluted questions lol, but hopefully someone has experience making up things like this.
Blueteeth
I am trying to make a small tilt sensor with adjustable angle. This will be a 'yes/no' type affair with a sounder, and to keep things simple I've decided on a tilt switch as opposed to using accelerometers and a micro. After being disappointed with non-mercury switches - the ever bouncy 'ball in a tube' job - I got hold of some small mercury switches that of course still bounce, but at an acceptable level.
In order to make it adjustable for the user - range about 45 degree's - I thought I could simply glue this to a trim-pot. The trimmer is used purely as a small turntable with friction to hold it in place, and to allow the user to use a small flat-head screwdriver to adjust it as necessary. As I mentioned before, absolute angle is not necessary - they can adjust it until the sensor beeps at the correct angle.
As its a very small glass tube (3.3x8mm) full of mercury, I am wondering if certain glues may crack this as they shrink. I even thought about encasing it all in hotmelt glue, but thats probably over complicating matters.
So, the question. I have epoxy (JB weld, JB plastic), super glue (don't think it could take the torsion) and hot melt. Do you think any general purpose adhesive will be ok? As it will be turned, the wires from the switch may provide a bit of pull, so if the user turns the pot with too much force, I don't want the mercury switch to shear off (as I suspect will happen with super glue) so a rubbery adhesive might be better, thus the hot melt. The trim-pots I am using are old skeleton types where the mechanical parts are metal, so we're talking metal to glass tube - not a neat fit.
I always ask such convoluted questions lol, but hopefully someone has experience making up things like this.
Blueteeth