If you've ever owned a Corsair I/II, 238-series tuner, 253 tuner and who knows what else in the product line, you're undoubtedly familiar with the bar-type selector knob and its propensity to crack. The antenna tuners used them for coil-tap and antenna selection; Corsairs for the bandswitch. They loosen up over time...so we crank the set screws tighter, which remedies the condition briefly...then they loosen up again and finally break.
The design is flawed: An unsupported bearing surface opposite the direction of thrust from the set screw, and perhaps with a weaker plastic compound. The little inner circular boss splits...sometimes in two, sometimes in three. From that point onward, you're going to chuck the knob and fit a new one.
Not so fast. Grab yourself a piece of styrene or ABS rod and some JB Weld, a toothpick and the old knob.
First step is to fabricate a buttress piece from the plastic rod. Use a file and flatten about 1/2" of the rod so it fits snugly into the space between the inner boss and outer knob skirt. Not too much force should be required to insert the flatted section...just enough to force the cracked inner boss together without gaps.
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