Reddit Reddit reviews Cast Acrylic Sheet

We found 4 Reddit comments about Cast Acrylic Sheet. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Industrial & Scientific
Industrial Materials
Plastic Raw Materials
Plastic Sheets
Cast Acrylic Sheet
Cast acrylic is a lightweight, rigid plasticResists breakage better than glassOffers excellent weather resistance
Check price on Amazon

4 Reddit comments about Cast Acrylic Sheet:

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/Etsy

AmazonSmile Link: Cast Acrylic Sheet, Translucent Black, 12" x 12" x 0.118" Size

^Use AmazonSmile to donate 0.5% of your purchase price to a charity of your choice at no extra cost to you.

u/NovaWildstar · 1 pointr/Etsy

It looks like a piece of gray acrylic. Acrylic gives that lovely reflection on jewelry. I actually use a white piece of acrylic for my photos. You can order it in different colors on Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/Cast-Acrylic-Sheet-Transparent-0-118/dp/B00JB7FEEU

u/fractal_cactus · 1 pointr/arduino

Easy enough, you mentioned that it is going on a project box.



You could either cut out the entire shape from the box, use that as a template on some translucent acrylic sheet and cut that. Do the same for the inner piece.

The only issue I see with this option is that the cuts need to be precise, in order to line up nicely. Something like Bondo could fill the gaps, if you get any.

The other option still uses the acrylic piece, but places it on top of the project box. Holes or gaps would have to be cut/drilled into the project box, beneath the acrylic.



This should be the easier of the two options. The downside here is that depending on how you place the gaps, there could be hot spots of light.

The first option provides a flush transition from box to shape, while the second has it tacked to the top. Both are viable, it just depends how much work you want to throw at it.

Something like this for the acrylic The light blue one looks close to what you have for the colour.

u/masasuka · 1 pointr/pcmods

yup, here's some basically, measure, cut, and use a riser glued to the back of the network card, or if the network card has riser slots, attach risers to those.

Cut with a hacksaw, make sure it's a bit too large (a mm or two, not too much), sand the edges with fine sandpaper down to size.

Pro tip, if it has a plastic covering on it (most do), LEAVE THAT ON UNTIL AFTER you sand the edges... makes sure the faces don't get scratched