Resin Kit Adding Lights?
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Resin Kit Adding Lights?
Hey guys,
How would one add lights to a solid resin kit?
Thank you,
-Jim
How would one add lights to a solid resin kit?
Thank you,
-Jim
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I'm building Alfred Wong's Cloakshape fighter kit and adding lights to it.
My strategy is to find the biggest area of the model and try to find a flat gluing surface which you can use to hollow it out from, preferably under the part you're going to light, like an engine exhaust or a headlight. When you're found the right spot, chuck a small bit into your rotary tool and make a small hole, From there, you can eat away a lot of the interior without having to have a big gaping hole in the side of the piece. Alternatively, if you're looking at a long section, a drill press might be the way to go (that's how I did the Cloak. I drilled all the way down the center of the fuselage). This gives you room to work and a place to put the circuit board(s).
After you've hollowed it out, make a reflector for the part you're attaching that needs to light up and attach it to the part, or else mount the reflector to the inside of the hollowed section behind the windows/bussards/etc. Back it with epoxy putty to secure it.
Then wire the LEDs to the circuit, seal it up, and you're done. The resin may need to be blacked out first, but the stuff Al's Cloak was cast in is pretty opaque; I can probably get away with a coat of silver and black.
If you find you can't access the windows from the hole or that you otherwise can't reach the areas you want to light, don't be afraid to saw the thing in half. You should be able to glue it back together without much trouble if you sawed it cleanly and use a slow-setting epoxy to reattach the halves. Just be sure to shim it with plastic that's the same width as the cut you made, so it'll be the same width as before you cut it.
And yes, for the love of all that's holy, PLEASE use a dust mask! Urethane resin is nasty stuff . . .
My strategy is to find the biggest area of the model and try to find a flat gluing surface which you can use to hollow it out from, preferably under the part you're going to light, like an engine exhaust or a headlight. When you're found the right spot, chuck a small bit into your rotary tool and make a small hole, From there, you can eat away a lot of the interior without having to have a big gaping hole in the side of the piece. Alternatively, if you're looking at a long section, a drill press might be the way to go (that's how I did the Cloak. I drilled all the way down the center of the fuselage). This gives you room to work and a place to put the circuit board(s).
After you've hollowed it out, make a reflector for the part you're attaching that needs to light up and attach it to the part, or else mount the reflector to the inside of the hollowed section behind the windows/bussards/etc. Back it with epoxy putty to secure it.
Then wire the LEDs to the circuit, seal it up, and you're done. The resin may need to be blacked out first, but the stuff Al's Cloak was cast in is pretty opaque; I can probably get away with a coat of silver and black.
If you find you can't access the windows from the hole or that you otherwise can't reach the areas you want to light, don't be afraid to saw the thing in half. You should be able to glue it back together without much trouble if you sawed it cleanly and use a slow-setting epoxy to reattach the halves. Just be sure to shim it with plastic that's the same width as the cut you made, so it'll be the same width as before you cut it.
And yes, for the love of all that's holy, PLEASE use a dust mask! Urethane resin is nasty stuff . . .
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- Posts: 94
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This:
http://s377.photobucket.com/user/JGG170 ... h.jpg.html
You can follow my build here:
http://s377.photobucket.com/user/JGG170 ... t=2&page=1
-Jim G.G.
http://s377.photobucket.com/user/JGG170 ... h.jpg.html
You can follow my build here:
http://s377.photobucket.com/user/JGG170 ... t=2&page=1
-Jim G.G.
Better To Die Ten Thousand , Thousand Deaths , Than Wound My Honor!