plywood questions
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scratchshipnut
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plywood questions
I just inherited a scrollsaw, bandsaw and belt sander and want to start using 19/32 plywood for some superstructure sections. But I dont have a truck so 4/8 sheets are out of the question. Any other sources for material that thickness in a more managable size?
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scratchshipnut
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Victorious
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scratchshipnut
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Victorious
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What scale ship are you building, because if you are doing a 1/350 scale model, 9/32 plywood is far too thick for building superstructure, it would even be far too thick for a scale 1/72 model. 9/32 is just under 5/16 inches thick, which is just over 1/2 inch.garyj36 wrote:I was hoping to find a 9/32 material to be close to a scale '8 in 1/350
I think you need to understand different thicknesses of material. The main frames on my Marlborough are only 4mm thick, which is just under 1/4 inch. The Marlborough is scale 1/96 and is just over 6 foot long. Superstructure wood needs to be a lot thinner.
Presently Building - Aircraft Carrier H.M.S. Victorious 1/96
Under Construction Laid Up - H.M.S. Marlborough 1/96
Under Construction Laid Up - H.M.S. Marlborough 1/96
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scratchshipnut
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Im talking about using the thickness as the vertical height. Laying out the overhead brofile of the deckhouse and cutting it out. Then adding an .030 plastic deck above.Like I did on this 1/700 Helena with 1/4 balsa. In 1/350th its kind of crazy to worry about straight walls on deckhouses when I could just scrollsaw the deckhouse out of appropriate thickness material.

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Victorious
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Ah, now I understand what you are doing. This fact was not explained in the first place. The way you put it, it sounded as though you were building the whole superstructure with it, like we do on large scale models.garyj36 wrote:Im talking about using the thickness as the vertical height. Laying out the overhead brofile of the deckhouse and cutting it out. Then adding an .030 plastic deck above.Like I did on this 1/700 Helena with 1/4 balsa. In 1/350th its kind of crazy to worry about straight walls on deckhouses when I could just scrollsaw the deckhouse out of appropriate thickness material.
Presently Building - Aircraft Carrier H.M.S. Victorious 1/96
Under Construction Laid Up - H.M.S. Marlborough 1/96
Under Construction Laid Up - H.M.S. Marlborough 1/96
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seaphoto
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Almost every lumber yard I have visited has a panel cutting saw, for slicing plywood into bite size pieces. There is either a nominal fee, or sometimes they will do it for free. I have a van, but still take advantage of this, as cutting panels is a lot of work by yourself LOLBut I dont have a truck so 4/8 sheets are out of the question.
Kurt
Kurt Greiner

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scratchshipnut
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