- Jan 2, 2006
- 10,455
- 35
- 91
I've got a pair of expensive IEMs and the plastic housing has cracked in a very annoying part. They're not under warranty.
The part of the housing that holds the cable plug is cracked. If the wire gets torqued in the direction of the arrow in the photo the cable plug socket gets pulled right out of the housing (pictured). Unfortunately this is a naturally high-torque point.
So what adhesive can I use to repair this? It needs to be able to withstand torque, be ok for use around electronics and wires, and it needs to be able to fill in the existing 2-3mm gap and provide rigid structure like the original plastic housing.
- Two-Part Epoxy
Permanent. I'm afraid that if I use epoxy I won't be able to open these back up again, at least without completely destroying the housing.
- Gorilla Glue
Gorilla glue isn't very stiff. Because it's foamy I think it will torque apart easily.
- Standard Super Glue
Too liquid. Can't fill up gaps very well. And I've heard that super glue can give off fumes that might damage the delicate balanced armature drivers of the IEMs.
- Gasket Maker
Probably too flexible.
- Some kind of gel glue that dries hard.
In my experience Amazing GOOP has been able to harden and be pretty stiff, but I'm overseas and Amazing Goop seems to only be an American thing. Unfortunately standard silicone-based glues are probably too flexible for this application.
Any ideas?
The part of the housing that holds the cable plug is cracked. If the wire gets torqued in the direction of the arrow in the photo the cable plug socket gets pulled right out of the housing (pictured). Unfortunately this is a naturally high-torque point.
So what adhesive can I use to repair this? It needs to be able to withstand torque, be ok for use around electronics and wires, and it needs to be able to fill in the existing 2-3mm gap and provide rigid structure like the original plastic housing.
- Two-Part Epoxy
Permanent. I'm afraid that if I use epoxy I won't be able to open these back up again, at least without completely destroying the housing.
- Gorilla Glue
Gorilla glue isn't very stiff. Because it's foamy I think it will torque apart easily.
- Standard Super Glue
Too liquid. Can't fill up gaps very well. And I've heard that super glue can give off fumes that might damage the delicate balanced armature drivers of the IEMs.
- Gasket Maker
Probably too flexible.
- Some kind of gel glue that dries hard.
In my experience Amazing GOOP has been able to harden and be pretty stiff, but I'm overseas and Amazing Goop seems to only be an American thing. Unfortunately standard silicone-based glues are probably too flexible for this application.
Any ideas?




