Is there a hard case for the 15c / 15c LE?
15c / 15c LE Hard Case?
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01-29-2012, 12:55 PM
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01-29-2012, 07:11 PM
A couple days ago i posted a similar question. And i asked if anyone has these. If you want a "hard" case i.e. one that is rigid, you might do well with this. Original idea from this post : http://hagy-box.cocolog-nifty.com/blog/2012/01/15c-gametech-ev.html ▼
01-29-2012, 07:41 PM
To let you know, I bought one of the faux leather expanding kind in your first example and am pretty pleased with it. It fits my 11C very well with just a little, perhaps 2mm, of the calculator showing over the limits of the open end of the case. It is pretty much the same as the original HP soft case in that respect. It seems to be rigid enough to give decent protection too without adding a lot of bulk. Indeed, the case still fits in my shirt pocket! I would certainly recommend this case for early Voyagers but I have heard that there is a slight dimensional difference between the original Voyagers and the 15C LE. I don't have an example of the later machine so can't comment on this model.
01-31-2012, 01:05 AM
Received today the leather case you mentioned above; looks well made, nice tight fit for my 15C LE, and still fit neatly in one's shirt pocket. ▼
01-31-2012, 03:47 PM
Don't these cases have a seam on the top border (where the faux leather meets the inside fabric) that colides with the calculator's feet every time you pull it out? I have one of those (from the same seller, so I assume it is precisely the same article) which I don't use for fear of forcing (and losing) the rubber feet. ▼
01-31-2012, 03:56 PM
I have never lost original HP-installed feet (meaning original 12C and new 12C+) using these cases but am ALWAYS losing the feet I replaced on my 11C. The funny thing is that the feet on the 12C+ are way more proud that the original 12C feet or the 11C feet. My 11C problem is likely that the adhesive I used for my home-made replacement feet isn't up to snuff -- contact cement and bicycle inner-tube patches are what I used. Anybody got a better combo?
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01-31-2012, 04:31 PM
The slip cases which come with the machines (if you don't have one, see here, for example) don't seem to put any type of stress on the feet on insertion/withdrawal. Wouldn't that solve your problem? ▼
01-31-2012, 04:41 PM
Agreed. My original cases do not have this problem, and I use an orignal case with my 11C but I bought the hard cases for the purpose of using it with my more treasured 11C rather than my knockoff 12C+. :-) Does anyone have any good advice on replacement feet and adhesive? How are the replacement feet I have variously seen on EBay?
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02-01-2012, 08:28 PM
I have used these feet with good success on a U.S. made 11C. Note that it might be possible to identify the replacements (besides the fact that they are not worn) by the corners. The new feet have sharp right-angled corners, but the feet I took off the 11C (I presume they were original) had very small, but non-zero, radius rounding at the corners. I bought a few sets from this seller. I also used them on my 15C LE when I fixed a marginally-functioning divide key. (I couldn't get the feet off without leaving some adhesive. Others have posted here with how to do it so you don't do that!) Note that the feet on the 15C LE (and I would have to guess on the 12C 30thAE and 12C+...) are a little thicker. The feet I bought were not tall enough to peek over the edges of the little plastic surround ("footwell") in which they sit. So when I set the calculator on a table, the plastic surround sat on the table, not the feet. Simple solution: stack two feet on each corner. (Not the most economical, but expedient at the time....) They have stayed on fine, even though they catch on stuff because the doubled feet are now thicker than the original. So I'm guessing that if the 11C feet are, say, 1.0 mm thick, then the 15C LE feet are more like 1.5 mm. I mailed one of the feet I took off the 15C LE to the seller so he could measure, compare, and perhaps find some thicker stock. Anyway, to answer the original question: The feet I've purchased from this seller have worked fine and stayed stuck. YMMV. Just be sure to tell the seller if you are putting the feet on a "new" Voyager -- and see if he can send thicker feet. Dale
02-03-2012, 11:31 AM
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I've seen voyagers lose feet due to breakdown of the
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When I looked at this a while ago the best solution for
The only problem is finding someone to sell you a single
Concerning feet you could probably use any rubber sheet
Quote: No idea but I do marvel at the profit margin. ▼
02-03-2012, 04:56 PM
I use carpet tape to attached my replacement feet and find it works very well to adhere rubber/vinyl to plastic. It's cheap and available at almost any hardware store in a variety of fabrics. ▼
02-03-2012, 05:38 PM
I agree carpet tape works very well, easy to find and cheap. Also I would like to suggest "Servo Tape" for a few reasons. First it is strong but once its removed, won't leave any residue, second it is somewhat compressible therefore provides stability when the rubber pad thickness is uneven and absorbs vibrations very well. ▼
02-03-2012, 07:57 PM
Thanks. I've never heard of servo tape, I'll have to give it a try.
02-03-2012, 11:24 PM
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I've looked at servo tape but wanted an adhesive relatively
I'd actually looked around for carpet tape initially. However ▼
02-04-2012, 11:58 AM
3M makes a "Scotch" brand 2" wide carpet tape that measures 6 mils, that's the one that works best for me. It's non-woven and feels like paper (but I think it some polymer). I'm pretty sure Edit: I'm sure that this is the stuff. And the latest roll I bought is even thinner than the previous one I got, it measures only 4 mils.
Edited: 4 Feb 2012, 12:06 p.m. |