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Helmets
Blasters
Stormtrooper Armor
Lightsabers
Astro-Mech Droids
How-to Guides
Cylon
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Viper Pilot Helmet
M41-a Pulse Rifle
Motion Tracker
B5 PPG
Retro
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40th Anniversary
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ME262 Project
Civilian
Marksmanship Program |
M1
Garand Rifle
M1903 Springfield
Rifle
M1 Carbine
Discussion
Board
Lauren Photo Albums
Egner II
Design
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Vac-u-form
Table Project: Mark II Design |
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Mark II design:
This
is the Mark II design. Again, I used the same 12"x18"
vac-table from the Mark I. But this time, I mounted the heating
grill upside down and about 10 inches from the vac-table surface.
Also, I installed an aluminum sheet between the heating element
and the work surface. I hope this will diffuse the heat and make
it more even. Finally, I made a new frame, larger with rounded sides.
I hope this will give me more surface area. Now, the inside area
is the same as the vac surface of the table. No wasted space lost
to the frame dimensions.
After
a series of test, the aluminum heat deflector did not work so it
was removed.
In
this image you can see the whole station. This rig is very portable.
The
mark II has a simple construction:
- peg
board material for the vac-surface
- Pine
1x6 or what ever you have on hand
- Pine
1x2 for the stilts and heater frame.
- Some
marine weather striping. I am told you really don'e need this
but it seems to help.
- Nails,
screws glue. I used an air gun and an electric drill to assemble
the table.
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Click on the
image for a larger view.
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Molds,
"Moulds" or Plugs:
Here
are some of the Stormtrooper molds or "plugs". Made of
MDF and basswood hobby boards. These will need to be sealed with
a sealer and some more sanding and risers with cut marks will need
to be added. The hand pieces are hand sanded using a rasp. No power
tools here! [Although a bandsaw was used to rough-cut the shapes.]
I used my existing FT/FX trooper set as a basic guide but with my
own interpretations added. The shoulder bell will be the largest
mould that I can use in this rig. If all goes well, A larger 24"x30"
or 24"x36" unit will be constructed. This larger production
table will need more heat, [3 or 4 units total, and a power strip]
and a better shop-vac, but should be large enough to make the entire
trooper suit. This all depends on how the MKII prototype performs.
Here
is a shot of the "hand" molds. Note, each part needs to
be elevated above the vac-table surface in order to have the correct
contours once it has been trimmed out.
And
a view of the shoulder bell still being worked on. The correct contour
is a little tricky. |
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The
Frame:
Here
is a detail shot of the frame that will be used to hold the melted
plastic sheets. Not quite finised, I hope it will provide the necessary
structure to hold the sheet of styrene for its trip to the vac-surface. |
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The
First Test Pull:
In
my initial trials, I used what polystyrene I had on hand, an old
"Garage Sale" sign. While functional as a test subject,
I really needed to find a good styrene source. I eventually found
"US
Plastics Corp." and ordered the .060 styrene in a 40"
x 72" sheet. Cost is $14.39 plus shipping. Not too bad. I am
optimistic that this will work out well. HIPs is just a short name
for High Impact Polystyrene. #43334. a 12" x 18" sale
sign will run $5.00. The paint on the sale signs seem to cause some
weird distortions too. |
Click on the
image for a larger view. |
Upgraded
Pulls:
Here
is the "US
Plastics Corp." .060 styrene in a 40" x 72" sheet.
Cost is $14.39 plus shipping. Not too bad. I measured the the frame,
scored it with a knife and slipped it into my frame. Two holes were
drilled and thumbscrews were slipped in. The plastic is held securely
during the heating and vac process. Here you can see the hand sections
and the collar strips being formed. Notice that around the corners
the plastic did not get hot enough. Also, I need to add risers with
cut marks to indicate where to trim the parts. |
Click on the
image for a larger view. |
Here
is another view of the second set of molds being vac-ed. I re-oriented
the heater, and got better results with this pull. I still need
to figure out some risers with cut marks on the "drop boxes"
as the "bottoms are too curvy. |
Click on the
image for a larger view. |
Here
is the final test pull, removed from the frame. You can see, this
is about the best I can expect from the current heating set-up. Not
bad, I'd say 80-85% coverage. The 3 hp Shop-vac seems to suck just
fine. I do have some extended heating issues with the cheap-o Sunbeam
grill that I am using for the heat source. Adding a second unit should
fix the problem. Also adding magnetic catches to hold the frame during
heating should make the transition smoother. |
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Test
Pull Anaylsis
After
studying the first batch of pulls, I made some minor modifications
to he heating elemet. I removed the perlite/furnace refractory from
under the heating elemet. This did not seem to have any heats reflecting
benefits. I inverted the stock metal heat shield. The built-in thermostat
seems to "cut off" about the time the plastic is ready
to vac. In addition, I've added a magnetic cabinet catches to the
frame to hold the platic in the heating position. This seems to
work very well. Also, final study of the .060 styrene tells me that
it is a little bit too thin. I think I'll try .080 when I run out
of this test material. |
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More
on the Molds
So
far, the moulds made for this stormtroopr project are the following:
- Left
hand
- Right
Hand
- Collar
- Shoulder
bell
- bicep
inner
- bicep
outer
- Right
knee "power pack"
- Hip
drop boxes
- innder
forearm
- outer
forearm
Moulds
that can be made with this vac-table are:
-
left knee "diamond"
- utility
belt if cut in 2 halves
- thermal
detonator encaps
- thermal
detonator
control pad
The
parts that might work in this machine but are unsure due to the
size/shape are the buttocks armor, and codpiece.
Molds
that will require a larger vac-table rig:
- inside
calf
- outside
calf
- right
Inside thigh
- right
outside thigh
- left
inside thigh
- left
outside thigh
- Abdomen
- Lower
back
- Chest
plate
- Upper
back
Since
I have a GT/FX armor set, and I know of some of its inaccurate elemets,
I have decided to "base" this project with those modifications
in mind, but using the GT/FX as a scale guide. |
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This
project was last update on June 1, 2004. |
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