Stacer Nav Light Base
Spares support for older Stacer products is patchy at best. Reproducing the nav light base locally is often quicker and cheaper than the hunt for old stock. With your sample on the bench this is a realistic reproduction job.

Spares support for older Stacer products is patchy at best. Reproducing the nav light base locally is often quicker and cheaper than the hunt for old stock. With your sample on the bench this is a realistic reproduction job.
Why these break
Light bases crack and the light works loose. The factory part is made from styrene-based plastic that loses its plasticisers over the years. It gets glassy, then one warm day it lets go under a load it used to handle easily.
How we reproduce them
Bring in the broken part and we'll reverse engineer it — usually with a design tweak that addresses why it failed in the first place, not just a copy of the weak original.
We print these in ASA. ASA is the UV-stable cousin of ABS — it holds its colour and strength through years of Australian sun where the original plastic went chalky and brittle.
Many plastic parts can be recreated, repaired, redesigned, or printed, depending on size, load, heat, material, and available samples. Bring in the damaged part or upload photos for assessment and we'll give you a straight answer before any work starts.
Part details
| Manufacturer | Stacer |
|---|---|
| Vehicle / equipment type | Boat / outboard |
| Common failure mode | Light bases crack and the light works loose |
| Typical use case | Direct replacement for the original nav light base on the Stacer. |
Printing & reverse engineering
| Can print directly | No |
|---|---|
| Can scan from broken sample | Yes |
| Can redesign / improve | Yes |
| Recommended material | ASA |
| Alternative materials | PETG-CF |
| Print technology | FDM |
| Difficulty | Medium |
| Estimated print time | 1–2 hours |
| Estimated cost range | $15 – $35 |
| Expected lifespan | 3–5 years of Australian UV |
| Outdoor suitable | Yes |
| Heat resistant | No |
| Load bearing | Depends |
| Requires post-processing | No |
Ask us about this part
Many plastic parts can be recreated, repaired, redesigned, or printed, depending on size, load, heat, material, and available samples.
