Oct-31-2021 09:21 AM
May-02-2022 09:02 AM
Mikell wrote:
It is a ridiculously expensive part.
Apr-30-2022 01:52 PM
Mikell wrote:
Thanks. I might not have needed to go all the way along the side with the sandwich, but since the failure was so catastrophic with the stop piece breaking off, and given the age of the skylight, I thought it best. I need to shine it up a little to remove the JB spillover. This fix addressed two problems - 1) the stop piece failure and 2) minimizing failure of the latches (which is the weak link in the skylight’s design).
Apr-30-2022 01:38 PM
Apr-30-2022 01:18 PM
Apr-30-2022 12:49 PM
Apr-30-2022 12:48 PM
Apr-30-2022 12:47 PM
Apr-30-2022 12:44 PM
Apr-30-2022 12:35 PM
Nov-02-2021 02:23 PM
Nov-02-2021 10:46 AM
Mikell wrote:
Here’s what I plan on doing after the fix so I don’t have to depend solely upon these sorry latches which also keep breaking.
https://youtu.be/bl2I3a4N2xU
The manual I have for the HEKI 3 Deluxe says it is “suitable for max. speeds of 100 km/hr” (or 62 mph). I usually drive around 60 mph, but occasionally faster. Perhaps speed as well as poor quality are contributors to failure. I didn’t see this speed factor in the manual until just recently.
Nov-02-2021 10:22 AM
Nov-02-2021 08:26 AM
Nov-02-2021 05:20 AM
Mikell wrote:
Correction. The connection points are part of the inside surface of the exterior frame (not the interior frame). The more I look at it, I’m considering running a 1” wide piece of aluminum bar stock (as thin as practical) down either the inside or outside of the exterior frame plastic channel the piece broke from, and riveting it to that channel. If I place the aluminum stock on the outer surface of that channel, I may be able to reuse the broken piece’s connection point. I could also run a piece of aluminum stock down the inside of the track as well, sandwiching the plastic channel wall between the aluminum.