by Jon » Mon Jun 02, 2008 3:22 pm
I'm scratch building the hull of a ship in 1/350 scale. With two kids and a flurry of new releases in 1/350 injection molding has made it tough to focus on my scratch building subject. Glue has caused my sheet plastic to expand forcing the front of the ship to lift. I cut away some of the offending pieces but now having trouble figuring out how to build up the bow.
My idea is to fill the bow with Low Expanding Foam, that stuff you use to fill and insulate gaps in your house. Foam in a can. Any one ever tried this before? The basic hull framework is there, I think enough to hold the foam in place. If it over flows a bit, I'll just shave it down. I'm going to give it a go in a few days but want to see if any one has tried this yet? I know the stuff dries pretty hard and isn't tacky so thought it might work for this.
Thank you,
Jonathan Somerville
I'm scratch building the hull of a ship in 1/350 scale. With two kids and a flurry of new releases in 1/350 injection molding has made it tough to focus on my scratch building subject. Glue has caused my sheet plastic to expand forcing the front of the ship to lift. I cut away some of the offending pieces but now having trouble figuring out how to build up the bow.
My idea is to fill the bow with Low Expanding Foam, that stuff you use to fill and insulate gaps in your house. Foam in a can. Any one ever tried this before? The basic hull framework is there, I think enough to hold the foam in place. If it over flows a bit, I'll just shave it down. I'm going to give it a go in a few days but want to see if any one has tried this yet? I know the stuff dries pretty hard and isn't tacky so thought it might work for this.
Thank you,
Jonathan Somerville