Hi folks.
I needed two of a particular bomb shape, but only had three halves... I think the other half ended up as a fairing of some kind, or it might be in a motel carpet somewhere. So rather than tryining to remember what kit from Big Lots the bomb came from, I tried molding a copy in epoxy glue with Silly Putty as the mold material. It was available, and seemed like it would work. The first attempt was not a success, since the silly putty sagged over the curing time. I ended up with a wide, flat, bomb half. What I needed was a shell around the silly putty to keep it from creeping too quickly. I crammed silly putty into a drop tank half slightly bigger than the bomb in question, pressed it over the bomb half and trimmed away the excess silly putty. The bomb half popped right out, and I filled the cavity with 15 minute epoxy (all I had around). After curing overnight, I had a usable copy of the missing bomb half. Cheap, quick, and easy. I should have stuck some bits of sprue into the back of the curing epoxy to make some keys for when I finally glue the halves together, but what I have will do just fine. No epoxy stuck to the silly putty. The main drawback is that the SP mold will sag and creep, but having only a thin layer of putty inside a rigid shell, and using a quick setting resin should eliminate most of these problems. Hope someone finds this useful,
Andrew
Silly Putty for molds- it kinda works!
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I've done a similar thing before using Silly Putty. I built a little Lego box around it, and crammed as much putty into it as possible to make sure there was absolutely not air pockets inside the box. Next I pressed the part into the putty. The master was a Mk. 82 bomb half whose fins I'd sheared off, by the way. I "poured" in CA glue, and then I did another with some epoxy. Both worked pretty well.
Z0mBe
Z0mBe
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I've played around with this too for duplicating greeblie bits. I use a little metal sauce dish (about the volume of a shot glass) from Target as an all-purpose mother mold for the silly putty.
Try using five minute epoxy for the casting- it doesn't give the putty enough time to sag before the part has solidified.
I tried using super glue at one point, but it bonded to the silly putty.
Try using five minute epoxy for the casting- it doesn't give the putty enough time to sag before the part has solidified.
I tried using super glue at one point, but it bonded to the silly putty.
"Chaos is found in greatest abundance wherever order is being sought. It always defeats order, because it is better organized."
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