Electronics and Heat Safe Adhesive/Tape/Sticky Substance?

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Let's say someone (possibly me, maybe a friend) has an Ultra Analog D20400A DAC package with some of that paper/foil lifting off and s/he wants to stick it back down where it belongs.

Is there an adhesive that is safe to use to do this?
 

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Sounds like the label is a bi-metal strip designed to bend under temperature change!
I see some things in there that get hot, but is the little box another heat source?
Either way, if it were mine I think I'd pull the labels off and keep them in a drawer.
 
The tape that we use industrially for electronics is Kapton. For example Botron Low-Static Kapton Tape, 1/2" from Botron Mektronics Australia

It's essentially heavy duty sticky tape. The first time I used it was for protecting gold plated edge connectors when feeding circuit boards through wave soldering machines, back when wave soldering was still a thing. It's also used for holding assemblies together before they go through reflow ovens, holding the guts of transformers together, pretty much everywhere in electronics assembly. You can literally apply the hot end of a soldering iron to it without damaging it.
 
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Yes, contact cement is safe on plastics. (Those components appear to have been potted in epoxy, which would make any safety concerns fairly moot as there's very little that will attack cured epoxy.)

The main benefit of polyimide tapes (such as Kapton) is the substrate of the tape (the plasticy bit rather than the sticky bit). That being said, polyimide tapes generally use a pressure-sensitive silicone adhesive, so that would be a good choice for glueing the labels back down too. Any non-corrosive silicone adhesive would work (and would have the advantage of less residue if you ever needed to remove it again).
 
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