replacing raised panel lines

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Digger1

replacing raised panel lines

Post by Digger1 »

I'm not very confident in my heating and stretching styrene skills. What other alternatives would be at one's disposal to replace sanded away raised panel lines?

I had to get rid of the seam on the dorsal of the Sulaco somehow...
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Stubbs
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Post by Stubbs »

Find some evergreen stock, glue it down, and sand it down to the right height. Otherwise, to hell with the actual raised line, use the back end of your blade to engrave a new one, and draw it out with the airbrush.

On the other hand, how scary can sprue stretching actually be?

1. Heat
2. Stretch to desired diameter
3. Bad Stretch. Get more sprue you'd normally toss away anyway.

:?
What's more dangerous? The guy holding a gun to your head, or the guy who has the literary skill to make poison read like sugar?

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irishtrek
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Post by irishtrek »

Put down some masking tape and fill the gap with putty and sand.
Digger1

Post by Digger1 »

irishtrek wrote:Put down some masking tape and fill the gap with putty and sand.
too late
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b5ranger99
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Post by b5ranger99 »

No it isn't, not for me. Thanks for that idea Irishtrek. It is which is now filed in teh metal "tool box" .
"When others do a foolish thing, you should tell them it is a foolish thing. They can still continue to do it, but at least the truth is where it needs to be."
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Lt. Z0mBe
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Post by Lt. Z0mBe »

Not to be flippant, but to hell with the raised lines. ;)

Scribe those babies away. Use the left over raised ones as a straight edge. Then, lightly sand the raised ones away. Check out the scribing thread in this forum for details.

Very, very fine fishing monofilament can be used to replace raised lines.

Kenny

www.sigmalabsinc.com


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Digger1

Post by Digger1 »

How would one adhere fishing line to styrene? Cleanly, I mean.
Tony Agustin
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Post by Tony Agustin »

You could try getting some .010 styrene sheet and cut extremely thin strips to use. Just use some liquid cement and boom your done.
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Lt. Z0mBe
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Post by Lt. Z0mBe »

Babaganoosh wrote:How would one adhere fishing line to styrene? Cleanly, I mean.
Future, diluted white glue, and, if you're careful, CA glue. That's how I have seen it done.

I hope this helps.

Kenny

www.sigmalabsinc.com


Onward, proud eagle, to thee the cloud must yield.
irishtrek
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Post by irishtrek »

b5ranger99 wrote:No it isn't, not for me. Thanks for that idea Irishtrek. It is which is now filed in teh metal "tool box" .
No problem, I reemeber that one from an old issue of scale auto back in the '80s.
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Mr. Badwrench
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Post by Mr. Badwrench »

Evergreen makes .010 and .015 diameter styrene rod. Scribe a panel line in the place you want the raised line to be, and fill it in with thin rod. No special glues needed, just regular cement.
I speak of the pompatous of plastic.
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