Millenniumf
Sr Member
I kinda thought the little discs reminded me of the Colonial Mineral Ship from Battlestar Galactica.
I forgot about that one. Yes, remarkably similar. Sean Sides ( tsides) built an incredible replica of that. I wonder does he know who was the modeller on that one?.I kinda thought the little discs reminded me of the Colonial Mineral Ship from Battlestar Galactica.
Joberg, tried those methods. Forcing the edges downward caused some of the styrene detail to lift in places. Wasn’t going to be perfectly flat. Tried laying the piece on a hot cloth with book weight on top for a few hours, changing the cloth every so often - no difference.A little hot water (or hair dryer) couldn't have solved the warping?
Thank you so much for the advice. All patterns warped/ cupped upwards at the corners so that there is a curve both longitudinally and laterally. Impossible to flatten - force it too much and you crack the 2mm acrylic base.Ok, I did not realize it was a master pattern.
For layered styrene or ABS, Its best to use super glue to hold flat sheets together. What I do is to use a small amount of solvent, Res-n-bond, to hold the parts in place. Once dry, I then carefully place a small amount of super glue to permanently position. Its what I have been doing for over thirty years as a model/pattern maker. Even on the smallest details, because it has to survive being put under pressure for molding.
It's almost impossible to make flat, a piece warped by solvent. My 2¢
Its really nice work!
Kelvin saucers good for that maybe…Sean Sides ( tsides)
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I am , Joberg. I can be contacted through the Blade Runner Art, Fashion, Photography Facebook Group and a link to my page.Btw, are you on Facebook? ……..
Searun,Interesting that one craftsman can reproduce what it took teams of extremely talented modelers to create……….