cavx
Master Member
The title says it all but I wanted to post it here because of the traffic this part of the forum gets and hopefully the information is useful for others.
I have harped on forever about thermoforming into a female tool instead of vacuum forming over a make tool or buck.
Here is the results of this method using simple DIY parts. The point of this was to make a replacement windshield for the vintage Star Wars Land Speeder. I used 3mm perspex which after the pull came out at about 2mm. I did an earlier version from 5mm.
The heater is a "turbo oven". These can be bought as low as $40.
I happen to own a 9cfm vacuum pump and so I used that for this, but I do think that with enough heat, even a vacuum cleaner could pull the plastic.
The chamber I used today is nothing more than a section of 4 inch PVC pipe with end caps glued into place. A 1/2 inch threaded plug is attached to the side. The top end cap has a big hole cut into it to allow the heated plastic to be pulled into the chamber.
The only thing I did wrong was not to sandwich the plastic between two plates. As a result the plastic warps and breaks the seal.
You could make the tool any shape and it would be best if the tool was placed into the chamber so that the plates holding the plastic get placed over that.
As long as you can get a good seal and have hot plastic, you should be able to make this work. This method is much easier than pulling over a male tool.
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I have harped on forever about thermoforming into a female tool instead of vacuum forming over a make tool or buck.
Here is the results of this method using simple DIY parts. The point of this was to make a replacement windshield for the vintage Star Wars Land Speeder. I used 3mm perspex which after the pull came out at about 2mm. I did an earlier version from 5mm.
The heater is a "turbo oven". These can be bought as low as $40.
I happen to own a 9cfm vacuum pump and so I used that for this, but I do think that with enough heat, even a vacuum cleaner could pull the plastic.
The chamber I used today is nothing more than a section of 4 inch PVC pipe with end caps glued into place. A 1/2 inch threaded plug is attached to the side. The top end cap has a big hole cut into it to allow the heated plastic to be pulled into the chamber.
The only thing I did wrong was not to sandwich the plastic between two plates. As a result the plastic warps and breaks the seal.
You could make the tool any shape and it would be best if the tool was placed into the chamber so that the plates holding the plastic get placed over that.
As long as you can get a good seal and have hot plastic, you should be able to make this work. This method is much easier than pulling over a male tool.






Sent from my SM-G900I using Tapatalk