good tool for chipping?
Moderators: DasPhule, Moderators
good tool for chipping?
What's a good tool for chipping out bits of dried putty that accidentally gets into sunken greebly details like on the sides of the Cardassian Galor? I know, before you say it, I should put down tape to protect these areas.
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- Posts: 1950
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 7:29 pm
I use a scalpel with a rounded blade, and just work it into the putty very gradually and lightly. It works on resin seam lines, etc in right areas. I don't know if there's a comparable X-acto blade as this is fairly small. But the curved nature of it helps to prevent slipping and cutting something off. Hope I made sense.
Did you eat your Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs this morning?
- Lt. Z0mBe
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- Location: Balltown Kentucky, by God!
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Flat toothpicks work great, along with the pointy-end ones.
Also, cotton swabs with the plastic shaft work great. Cut one end off at an extremely pointy angle and you're left with a tiny plastic punji stick to clean hard to reach areas. It also works great for cleaning clogged panel lines.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
Also, cotton swabs with the plastic shaft work great. Cut one end off at an extremely pointy angle and you're left with a tiny plastic punji stick to clean hard to reach areas. It also works great for cleaning clogged panel lines.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
Hi try your local surgical supplies or dentist.I have found dental instruments to be invauble they have loads of different tips.Ideal for any type of model making.
Or the cheaper solution that you may have in your tool box fine files work just as well.
Hope I don't encounter the same trouble when I build mine.
Or the cheaper solution that you may have in your tool box fine files work just as well.
Hope I don't encounter the same trouble when I build mine.
- Pat Amaral
- Posts: 3730
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 2:44 pm
- Location: Ok, I'm here. You can start now
I second the dental tool suggestion. I have a number od different types that I use and I find them invaluable. Dentists always have several on hand. Even if one of the tips is broken, it's usually still useful for what we need them for. Dentists are likely to just toss a broken tipped tool out. Your dentist might be willing to hold on to his/broken tools for you if you ask.
Pat A.
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