huge bubbles in my pressure-cast moulds???

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Antenociti
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huge bubbles in my pressure-cast moulds???

Post by Antenociti »

Hi all, bit of an oddity today...

i've pressure cast some of my production moulds "as usual" over the weekend.. however when popping them out of the pot this morning i have found 4 of them have huge (massively huge) pockets of air in them.

My build process is the same: mould blocks for the box (lego), with a tacky-glue seal around the bottom on to 2mm thick styrene. pour in the silicone, allow to degass on its own for 30-60 minutes, then whack in the pressure pot at 60psi and leave for 24hours +.

pressure this morning (48 hours later) was still over 40psi, so I know the pressure was on the whole time... but on the "top" surface of the mould has a massive 3cm wide and 15mm deep air pocket in it - with the surface bloated upwards.

this is the first time i've seen this in 4 years of doing this..and we are repalcing moulds on a weekly basis as they get used up.....

the only thing that i did differently this time was to cover the outside of the mould-blocks with sellotape. This was done because i was getting some wastage of silicone that escaped through the gaps between the blocks.

Does anybody have any ideas why and where these huge "bubbles" have come from...i'm at a complete loss as to what might have happened and have never seen anything like it.

(no camera at the workshop today so i cant take any iamges sorry)
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Chacal
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Post by Chacal »

Are you supposed to apply pressure to the silicone as it cures? I was under the impression one would pressure cast the resin, and put the silicone RTV in a vacuum prior to laying it onto the mold box, then leaving it be until cured.
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Antenociti
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Post by Antenociti »

been doing it this way for 4 years without any troubles at all.... cant explain why it went wrong this time.
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Stu Pidasso
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Post by Stu Pidasso »

I'm thinking the huge bubble was just a collection of little bubbles that coagulated into the big one, popped as it was pressurized, but the RTV was cured enough to not "level out" into a flat mold top.

Got any pics?
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Post by Blappy »

Perhaps by putting tape on the outside to the blocks you trapped the air in between them because the rubber could not ooze out.

I tried pressuring the rubber after pouring years ago but stopped when I had a master I thought was solid collapse on me. It was a pretty ugly situation. I have however Vacuumed the rubber after pouring it when I knew for sure the master was solid. Thats how I got the detail on the neck here to turn out. http://www.starshipmodeler.com/newshop/ ... k_1917.jpg

Degassing your rubber before pouring it into the mold is a far superior method and it does not tie up a valuable pressure pot for 24 hours. On a good day a single pressure pot can make me over $200.00 casting.
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vaderman
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Post by vaderman »

I agree with Blappy. Degas your molds rather than pressure cast. Use a vacuum chamber to degas the silicon first. Then pour into the mold box and the degas the molds in the pressure chamber. After that, you can pressure cast your parts.

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Post by Migmaker »

It's true, I learned from one of the finest and not best mold makers out there many years ago....degassing (, de-airing,vacuuming) the rtv is a must, forget the pressurizing. Only need to pressurize the castings from the mold tool. I've been casting myself since 94, never did it the way you are. :D

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