Help with molding model car tires
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Help with molding model car tires
Hi, just thought I'd put this out there to see if it is possible. I recently picked up a fiberglass 1/8 Keaton batmobile car kit with resin wheels and tires. I was wanted to make vinyl tires (I believe this is what normally comes with 1/25 scale cars). I have a solid resin tire that I could use to create a mold, but can anyone recommend a product to create the soft vinyl tire casting?
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- Stu Pidasso
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- Umi_Ryuzuki
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Interesting, I use no mold release and talc...
But then I am using a Polytek polyurethane.
Of course we are also trying for that chewed up look on tugboats.
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/attachme ... id=4326501
But then I am using a Polytek polyurethane.
Of course we are also trying for that chewed up look on tugboats.
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/attachme ... id=4326501
- Umi_Ryuzuki
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No, I typically don't buy such small quantities.Darthsideous wrote:Do you use micro mark products Umi?
Polytek 74-30 is what I am using, I wait a week for molds to cure before pouring.
Last edited by Umi_Ryuzuki on Sat Jan 14, 2012 3:22 am, edited 3 times in total.
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I'll see what I can do for pictures. I've never posted pics on the internet before. What's the best site to post them to?
With respect to the batmobile the tires are 3 to 4 inches across and about 2 to 2.5 inches thick. Bear in mind I have never casted anything before can you guys tell me approximately how much micromart tire resin I will need, also which product can you recommend for the mold material?
With respect to the batmobile the tires are 3 to 4 inches across and about 2 to 2.5 inches thick. Bear in mind I have never casted anything before can you guys tell me approximately how much micromart tire resin I will need, also which product can you recommend for the mold material?
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Ok, hopefully this will work I have tried creating a photbucket account and sharing it. Here's the link:
http://s1244.photobucket.com/albums/gg5 ... ld_Hitman/
Besides trying to cast rubber tires. I also have to repair the wheels which were extremely damaged during shipping. I'm thinking I'll need to repair the wheels and then recast them so they will not break apart? I was think of using aves apoxy sculpt to repair the wheels has anyone had experience with this sort of repair? will Aves work?
Once the wheels are repaired I'll mount the rubber tires I mold on them.
http://s1244.photobucket.com/albums/gg5 ... ld_Hitman/
Besides trying to cast rubber tires. I also have to repair the wheels which were extremely damaged during shipping. I'm thinking I'll need to repair the wheels and then recast them so they will not break apart? I was think of using aves apoxy sculpt to repair the wheels has anyone had experience with this sort of repair? will Aves work?
Once the wheels are repaired I'll mount the rubber tires I mold on them.
- Umi_Ryuzuki
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It comes with separate wheels, so all you have to do is drill out the wheel part of the one-piece wheels/tires. There are certainly worse things to have to fix.Umi_Ryuzuki wrote:The issue I see, seems to be that the wheel and tire are one piece in some
fashion. How will you separate the tire form the wheel to make your molds?
That really is an awesome model though. It doesn't look overly detailed, but at that size it would be easy to do that yourself. I'll have to keep my eye out for one of those. I have the smaller kit and that looks like a Matchbox car in comparison!
Is this the one from the Howard Studios shell? I thought that was pulled directly from an original studio scale one. If so, it's probably the most accurate one you can get, aside from buying the real full-size car.
-Rog
EDIT: I'm wondering, though, if you've taken a trip to your local RC shop to see if there are any pre-made tires that would fit the rims? It might be worth a try, since there's really nothing special about the tires where you have to worry about some special detail.
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Thanks for the advice Umi! I'm thinking that I will cut out the centres of the rubber casting, and insert the resin replacements. i have never tried this before so i don't know if cutting out the ruber will work, but I figured I'd give it a try.Umi_Ryuzuki wrote:The issue I see, seems to be that the wheel and tire are one piece in some
fashion. How will you separate the tire form the wheel to make your molds?
If you calculate the cubic volume of your tires, you can then
calculate the number of ounces of material you will need to cast them.
Plan ahead, then back up and plan further ahead.
Start by cleaning up the parts and making molds of one of each front and back wheel & tire as is. That will give you the ability to cast more if your attempts to drill out the ones you have go wrong somehow. Secondly, it will give you a way to back up and use resin tires & wheels if you can't find or make suitable rubber or vinyl replacements.
Also investigate what http://www.smooth-on.com carries. I'm sure they have something standard for casting tires and such and they'll probably be cheaper then MicroMark. MicroMark carries a lot of unusual stuff but they've never exactly been a bargain.
Start by cleaning up the parts and making molds of one of each front and back wheel & tire as is. That will give you the ability to cast more if your attempts to drill out the ones you have go wrong somehow. Secondly, it will give you a way to back up and use resin tires & wheels if you can't find or make suitable rubber or vinyl replacements.
Also investigate what http://www.smooth-on.com carries. I'm sure they have something standard for casting tires and such and they'll probably be cheaper then MicroMark. MicroMark carries a lot of unusual stuff but they've never exactly been a bargain.
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Hi Rogviler,
Thanks for the feedback. I was told that it was came from the The Magic Model Company, which was the second unit for the 1989 Batman movie. I haven't done any research to determine how acurate this is. I just wanted a big batmobile without spending about $2000.00 for a prebuilt one.
I've built lit 1/25 scale versions of this car before so I'm pretty sure I can do the same with this one in a larger scale. The cockpit will be the spot for detailing as well as the machine guns, not sure if I can do a pull out the engine. the body will take alot of work. Hopefully i can post it on this site even though it's not a starship.
Thanks for the feedback. I was told that it was came from the The Magic Model Company, which was the second unit for the 1989 Batman movie. I haven't done any research to determine how acurate this is. I just wanted a big batmobile without spending about $2000.00 for a prebuilt one.
I've built lit 1/25 scale versions of this car before so I'm pretty sure I can do the same with this one in a larger scale. The cockpit will be the spot for detailing as well as the machine guns, not sure if I can do a pull out the engine. the body will take alot of work. Hopefully i can post it on this site even though it's not a starship.
- Joseph Osborn
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Tell me about it ... The "tire" casting rubber from Micro-Mark is just firm urethane rubber that has to be tinted black by the user. Probably something like Vyta-Flex from Smooth-On.Ziz wrote: Also investigate what http://www.smooth-on.com carries. I'm sure they have something standard for casting tires and such and they'll probably be cheaper then MicroMark. MicroMark carries a lot of unusual stuff but they've never exactly been a bargain.
I hope you got a good deal on that kit, Darthsideous! It looks like those wheels have been through a woodchipper. Better than starting from scratch, though
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
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Thanks ZIZ & Joseph, I'm totally new to casting so your help with products is really appreciated. I did get the kit at a decent price and I'm asking the seller for some money back due to the wheel damage from shipping, but I am under no illusion, this model will take alot of work.Joseph Osborn wrote:Tell me about it ... The "tire" casting rubber from Micro-Mark is just firm urethane rubber that has to be tinted black by the user. Probably something like Vyta-Flex from Smooth-On.Ziz wrote: Also investigate what http://www.smooth-on.com carries. I'm sure they have something standard for casting tires and such and they'll probably be cheaper then MicroMark. MicroMark carries a lot of unusual stuff but they've never exactly been a bargain.
I hope you got a good deal on that kit, Darthsideous! It looks like those wheels have been through a woodchipper. Better than starting from scratch, though
I've also going to take Rogviler's advise and see if I can find RC tires that will fit the wheels.
I'll probably start a new thread when I start work on the body to ask for help working with fiberglass.