Question about filler. (Newb alert)

sobsmb

New Member
Sorry if this has been asked before, I searched but didn't find anything. So I'm working on a Millennium Falcon found at gambody.com (Millennium Falcon 3D Printing Model | Standard Assembly Kit) I'm pretty close to the point of painting the inside lower portion of the ship, but after looking at it and given that it printed in PLA and doesn't have "perfect" seams I want to cover and fill the bottom of the ship so that the "coupler" pieces are all covered and I have a relatively smooth/flatter surface for the black paint to go on so all those "coupler" pieces are hidden from view. See images. I'm looking for recommendations on a light weight (this thing is going to be heavy once done without it) but thick mostly liquid item to put down to "fill" in the bottom. I don't want to use expanding foam as it will get too think, and I think bondo would be too weak/crack a lot. the ship as of now does flex a little. but once this is done I think it will be more rigid. I do plan on running wires / leds / fibers to many location eventually but I can worry about that later, once I get a plan going.

Thanks in advance
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I recommend real Bondo body filler, in case you haven't tried it before. That stuff is tough, cures with two parts, sands medium-easy, and does not easily crack. It comes in a can. The soft stuff that cracks is the Bondo spot putty/glaze. I just use that for filling small holes or cracks.

Good luck!
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Another good option I've used is called, Apoxie Sculpt. It comes in two parts where you do have to mix together, but for small areas, mix like two marble sizes balls and work it into the model with some water. Also comes in bigger containers if more is needed.
These little ones lasted me years doing a bunch of projects.
You can at least read about it off google and see if that works for you.
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Auto body supply shops do sell smaller-batch, more creamy 2-part fillers that will kick in minutes and result in little to no shrinkage. I think it’s made by the same outfits that do 2K paint, primers, and clear coats in a single spray can.
 
Would those parts not be covered up or otherwise hidden anyway?
I think mostly, but some of the cover parts are pipes and whatnot, I think I may just paint it all flat back and should be good enough. I don't think there is really any good, easy filler I could use.
 
If you use P38 body filler that contains styrene (Bondo, Isopon, Big Boy, etc), you can add fibreglass resin to the putty part (check it also contains styrene) at 10% ratio before you add the hardener, to make it creamier, smoother and with few pinholes. YT video below showing how to do it and the kind of consistency you should expect. It doesn't suit all applications but might come in useful (I intend on experimenting with it for small casting once I get the fibreglass resin and the time).

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There is a two part filler called evercoat glazing putty. It is finer than the bondo filler.

If you are looking for something lighter, there is a lightweight filler made for wooden r/c model airplanes, generically referred to as "model balsa filler".
 

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