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25-01-2012 17:16
robostangs548
We just use a bic lighter and hold both pieces over the flame. When they are both hot (or melting) we just shove both ends into each other. When cool, we hit it on a belt sander, and repeat the entire the process until the seam is smooth. Just try not to inhale that magic black smoke....
25-01-2012 19:23
Dad1279Our first tries were with fire, didn't like the fumes, burnt rubber smell, and the joints were less uniform. This really is simple. Used it last year and on our Lunacy robot without fail. Pull the trigger on the soldering gun until both sides melt, and slide out the gun. Let it cool for a few minutes, and trim off the part that mushrooms with side cutters.
25-01-2012 22:27
robostangs548
Yes, but how would MacGyver do it in a sealed room with only polycord and a bic?
No, I agree, the less magic black smoke the better. You will live much longer doing it that way... 
28-01-2012 12:54
pmangels17I found an easier way to do it.
We did it a bit differently. Took a 1"x1"x.125"thick aluminum U-channel about 4 inches long. Then i hot glued two aluminum angles (1"x1"x.125" thick) about an inch long each into the channel with half an inch in between so the aluminum doesnt take away the heat and cause the belt to cool rapidly. heat the first quarter inch of each side of the belt over a heat gun, not a flame or soldering iron. The heat gun lets it cool easier. put one side of the belt in each angle piece, stick them together. hold for two minutes, the water cool under running water, as a bucket will force you to bend the connection. trim in with wire cutters and take it to the belt sander. dont hold the belt directly on the table for the sander, because it can rip it through the gap between the sander and the table and break the sander, get somebody hurt, and ruin the belt.
Good Luck Teams 
28-01-2012 19:32
codes02Any reason you guys are melting the polycord together instead of just tieing it?
My team has decided to go with tieing due to concerns about the melted together joint being weak and our inability to identify any benefit to melting it
28-01-2012 19:46
BrendanB|
Any reason you guys are melting the polycord together instead of just tieing it?
My team has decided to go with tieing due to concerns about the melted together joint being weak and our inability to identify any benefit to melting it |
28-01-2012 20:13
Dad1279|
Any reason you guys are melting the polycord together instead of just tieing it?
My team has decided to go with tieing due to concerns about the melted together joint being weak and our inability to identify any benefit to melting it |
28-01-2012 21:34
V_ChipFor out polycord welding we milled out a simple assembly like above.
Two 1" blocks of aluminum are attached to a rail system on a base. The tops are notched to cradle the polycord.
On one of the sliders there is a hole just large enough to put the polycord through. Each end of the cord is slid through and cut against the face of aluminum with a razor blade so that it's perfectly flat.
The hot knife is then held between the seated ends. Once hot the rail cradles are slid together and form a clean and even "weld"!
I can upload some photos upon request. 
28-01-2012 22:30
V_Chip