styrene wraps
Moderators: Joseph C. Brown, Moderators
styrene wraps
Hi all,
I'm trying to wrap 0.01" styrene sheet around a plastic form (not styrene--made out of the ends of two soft plastic medicine bottles butted together and glued) to make a cylinder, and having little luck. I can't get the wrap tight, it looks terrible, the solvent melts through, etc.
The cylinder will end up being about 7 cm long by 3 cm diameter, so it's not too big or small.
Can anybody give hints? There's got to be some way to manage when Plastruct doesn't make the right size tubes.
Thanks!
Jeff
I'm trying to wrap 0.01" styrene sheet around a plastic form (not styrene--made out of the ends of two soft plastic medicine bottles butted together and glued) to make a cylinder, and having little luck. I can't get the wrap tight, it looks terrible, the solvent melts through, etc.
The cylinder will end up being about 7 cm long by 3 cm diameter, so it's not too big or small.
Can anybody give hints? There's got to be some way to manage when Plastruct doesn't make the right size tubes.
Thanks!
Jeff
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Ayup. It's the "almost, but not quite right" problem.USSARCADIA wrote:Have you tried looking for some ABS pipe from a home center or plumbing supply?
I did find a wooden dowel that's the right size a few minutes ago at the local Home Depot, so I'll sand/prime/sand/prime and use that. But I'd still really like to get a handle on doing wraps, since I can't always count on getting the right size, and I don't have a lathe.
Jeff
Why don't you just glue both of these to a wooden dowel for support? Make sure that the dowel touches the bottom of each medicine bottle,so that there's no wobbliness. Then,glue each one to the dowel after you check the fit to make these butt together with the correct support. This will give you strength,and stability. Just put a drop of glue on each end of the wooden dowel,then around the collars,and fit them together. I'd use Elmers' white glue so that if you make a mistake,you can fix it!
- Chacal
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I would go for something similar to the wooden dowel above, but with a styrene sheet triangular prism — triangular because that's a basic structural shape: it won't flex or bend as much as pretty much anything else (when you see the arms of construction cranes, they're triangular prisms—made of tubes for weight reduction). So, cut three rectangles as long as you need (close to the 70mm overall length) and as wide as possible so that a triangular prism of them will fit inside the medicine bottles. A good idea would be to let them overshoot, like this, so you can play a bit to fit them best. From then on, it's the same as the dowel method above.
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- Umi_Ryuzuki
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As a card modeler who has to do this kind of thing often (except with paper, not styrene) you could roll it. Lay your piece of plastic on a computer mousepad or a similar type of foam pad and then use a length of brass tubing to roll over the plastic in the direction of the curl you want to impart. The brass tube should be smaller than what you want the rolled plastic to be, and you should roll the plastic as if you were rolling dough with a rolling pin.
- Joseph C. Brown
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Have you looked at the tutorials over at lyzrdstomp.com? Wrapping styrene around medicine bottles and vitamin bottles to make sci-fi items?
http://www.lyzrdstomp.com/index.php?opt ... Itemid=120
http://www.lyzrdstomp.com/index.php?opt ... Itemid=120
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Joe Brown
Joe Brown
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Re: styrene wraps
Jeff for the future of wooden dowels micro-mark has a nice tool that will make your in between sizes a reality.Not sure how big of a dowel you can start out with but check their catalog on line.jgoldader wrote:Hi all,
I'm trying to wrap 0.01" styrene sheet around a plastic form (not styrene--made out of the ends of two soft plastic medicine bottles butted together and glued) to make a cylinder, and having little luck. I can't get the wrap tight, it looks terrible, the solvent melts through, etc.
The cylinder will end up being about 7 cm long by 3 cm diameter, so it's not too big or small.
Can anybody give hints? There's got to be some way to manage when Plastruct doesn't make the right size tubes.
Thanks!
Jeff
Also you can check plastic supply houses, they often sell acrylic rod and tubes in a tremendous amount of sizes.
You may have to use super glue if the plastic is so thin the solvent is eating through.
Regards,
Michael
Regards,
Michael