Re: Iron Man Mk. IV Helmet
Day 11 (Part 2):
I was going to make you guys wait until tomorrow, but caved in and decided to post these tonight instead.
It took me several hours to cut the faceplate off (using the dremel disc in the previous post, and a few more once those broke) for a couple of reasons: The rondo slush casting was thicker in some parts than expected, with some parts actually ending up being almost 1/4" thick! This takes a really long time to cut through and was giving my Dremel a difficult time so half of my time was spent waiting for the dremel to cool down a little bit.
I started out with the lines on the side and just lightly cut into it (very shallow cut) in a very straight motion moving at the elbow to try and get the line as straight as possible. Then more passes were made over it, each one going deeper than the last. Having done the straight lines on the side, I went down to do the jaw and found that I couldn't get my dremel in there. Cue the drill! I drilled lots of small holes (similar to how I took out the eyes/lower cheeks) and sort of hack-n-slash-n-bashed my way through the jaw... Couldn't really recommend it but it seems to have come out fine, so... *shrug*
Finally, I tackled the last part: the top. I cut into these very diagonally because in the original references it looks like the faceplate is supposed to sit down ontop of the tongue that sticks out... wanting to save myself work later I decided to try and cut horizontally (instead of vertically further over and then sanding it down and patching it up), but decided on diagonal because the material was way too thick to do it horizontally. This is the area where I encountered 1/4" thick bondo, and I actually have a few drill holes (corners of the tape in the second image) where I was checking the depth since I couldn't get my blade through. This was mostly a slow process and it'll be fun come cleanup time, but in the mean time we're apart!
There's also a loose flap of rondo-covered fiberglass sticking out on the left side of the helmet... that was a goof earlier, make sure you get your fiberglass stuck all the way down, and make sure it butts all the way up into corners!
Progress is going to get a lot slower from here on out, just because it's a lot of finessing of each part that's hard to exemplify in photos
dude thats an awsome way to mark out the face plate buddy mite try that
Thanks! The only issue I came across with it is the edges can get a little fuzzy if you pass the dremel right next to it multiple times.