I have been reducing kit parts for my current project (the Swift from Space 1999) and some of you have asked for my recipy so I wrote a quick article, here it is
I recall someone had a series of formulas posted here a while ago, but the thread must have dropped off the boards, 'cuz I couldn't find it when I went looking for it recently.
honestly, I've been thinking about this and come to the conclusion that I don't think it will work. This is mainly because in a two part mold, you will have a different volume of RTV back side verses the front, So with that in mind, my best estimate is this will only work for single open cavity molds.
I could be wrong, but I think you will end up with different mold shrinkage rates because of this. I hope I'm wrong though...
Will
If you can dream it, I can build it, and probably already have...... William
honestly, I've been thinking about this and come to the conclusion that I don't think it will work. This is mainly because in a two part mold, you will have a different volume of RTV back side verses the front, So with that in mind, my best estimate is this will only work for single open cavity molds.
I could be wrong, but I think you will end up with different mold shrinkage rates because of this. I hope I'm wrong though...
What if the mold was poured as one piece and opened using the jeweler's cut method? It would take some skill and patience and might not work for everything, but could have some possibilities???
worth a try!...guess I can run some small tests... I've always only done the single pours though myself....I have however, used this little trick for many years so know the process well..
Cheers,
Will
If you can dream it, I can build it, and probably already have...... William
Migmaker wrote:honestly, I've been thinking about this and come to the conclusion that I don't think it will work. This is mainly because in a two part mold, you will have a different volume of RTV back side verses the front, So with that in mind, my best estimate is this will only work for single open cavity molds.
I could be wrong, but I think you will end up with different mold shrinkage rates because of this. I hope I'm wrong though...
Will
I don't think volume matters here. Both mold parts will shrink evenly (loose the same mass ratio) so if they fitted together before shrinking they should still fit correctly after. Still, I haven't tried it myself so I may be wrong...
This is one of those things that can only be settled by practical experiments.
Sheer elegance in its simplicity.
Political unrest in dictatorships is rather like a round of rock-paper-scissors: The oposition goes on denouncing the regime on the papers, the regime censors the papers, rock-throwing ensues.