So back in college, I splurged on a MacBook -- the one with the white polycarbonate shell. My experience with CRAPple Care (2 x repairs, and one time it came back with a dead battery that Apple refused to replace -- looking like it had been thrown across a room) leaves a bad taste in my mouth. From a computer standpoint, even being as old as it is (purchased in 2006), it still runs circles around my NEW laptop. However, the MacBook had a major design flaw that caused the palm rest to chip away:
I recently dug my old MacBook out, and decided to polish the plastics, clean up the palm rests, and put a new battery on it. It's about to spend the rest of it's life as a shop computer.
With that said, I was thinking about how I could keep this problem from getting worse. After thinking about it for a bit, I decided that *maybe* I could get some 3/32 aluminum sheet and fashion a set of palm rest covers, which would then be polished and permanently affixed to the existing palm rests with epoxy.
I can lay the design out with no problem, but trying to cut these out with shears is leaving the edges dangerously sharp. Do any of you have a CNC plasma table or method of cutting these out that will yield softer edges?
I recently dug my old MacBook out, and decided to polish the plastics, clean up the palm rests, and put a new battery on it. It's about to spend the rest of it's life as a shop computer.
With that said, I was thinking about how I could keep this problem from getting worse. After thinking about it for a bit, I decided that *maybe* I could get some 3/32 aluminum sheet and fashion a set of palm rest covers, which would then be polished and permanently affixed to the existing palm rests with epoxy.
I can lay the design out with no problem, but trying to cut these out with shears is leaving the edges dangerously sharp. Do any of you have a CNC plasma table or method of cutting these out that will yield softer edges?