The humidifier that Came With The House™ had a lid with two broken plastic hinges that I figured I could never replace, but while cleaning out the fuzz for the upcoming season I found one missing piece stuck inside the lid. Given a hint, I glued it back in place:

There’s a strip of duct tape around the outside holding the fragment in place while the adhesive cured.
A manual curve fit to the image in Inkscape produced the red outline, which gets saved as a plain SVG and fed into OpenSCAD to create a solid model:

The cylinder doesn’t exactly fit the end of the hinge, but it’s close enough. The straightforward OpenSCAD code making that happen:
// Humidfier Hinge Replacement
// Ed Nisley KE4ZNU
// 2024-10-20
HingeThick = 10.0;
PinLength = 10.0;
ScrewOD = 2.0;
NumSides = 2*3*4;
Protrusion = 0.1;
difference() {
union() {
translate([0,0,HingeThick])
cylinder(d=6.0,h=PinLength,$fn=NumSides);
linear_extrude(height=10.0,convexity=5)
translate([-3.1,-8.0])
import("Humidifier Hinge - ouline.svg");
}
cylinder(d=ScrewOD,h=4*(HingeThick + PinLength),center=true,$fn=8);
}
The pin has a hole for a M2 screw, but contemplation of the broken pieces suggested the pin wasn’t the weakest link, which later experience confirmed.
Figuring I’d need only one hinge, I made a spare for fitting:

The unmodified part fit just about perfectly, whereupon a completely ad-hoc fixture involving a pair of laser-cut MDF slabs, a craft stick epoxy mixer, and more duct tape held it in place while the adhesive cured:

The hinge pin turned out to be half a millimeter too long, which is easily fixed, and it worked fine:

That’s more duct tape wrapped around the perimeter to hold the pieces in place, should it break again.
Which, I regret to report, occurred on the way up the stairs from the Basement Shop™ when the lid slipped from my grasp, fell away from the rest of the humidifer’s top panel, and jammed open:

The PETG-CF part held together, the adhesive remained bonded to both pieces, but the original plastic fractured just below the joint. A closer look from the other side shows the break:

The other hinge broke about where it did before.
So the humidifier remains in service with the lid in status quo ante and a small bag inside holding the fragments for the next return to the shop.
Drat!
Comments
3 responses to “Humidifier Lid Hinges”
These types of breakages are always a challenge….
I tend to over engineer the fix, and it looks like hell, extra thickness, extra screws….etc….
but most times , ‘looks’ don’t matter….Kinda like getting older and everyone still looks good :)
Aye! I’ve never been afraid of the ugly fix, either!
Had I not fumbled the lid on my way up the stairs, it would likely have survived forever in normal use. Maybe next year I’ll get it right. :grin:
[…] (Model 758.154200 if you’re keeping score) that Came With The House™ works fine with its lid hinges broken, Mary heard an odd hissing sound somewhere inside. The sound continued with the thing unplugged […]