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Doctor Ben's How-To #4: "Hot Glue  Casting" technique booklet (16pgs color & B/W)

   Browsing through my old GAZETTES some time ago, I picked up the  January/February 1982 issue. In this long-out-of print magazine, I found an  article about casting detail parts. In that article Terry Metcalfe described how  he cast parts by melting beads of a thermoplastic called "Makit and Bakit" in  RTV molds in an ordinary kitchen oven. Unfortunately, this technique didn’t work  out so well for me.

  Photo at Right: The author’s HO Scale Hookers Point Lighthouse diorama was awarded First Place in On-Line Displays, Most Photogenic, the Badger Award for  Weathered Finish, and the Testors Highest Iron Award at the NMRA National  Convention in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1995. Many, if not most of the details on  this diorama are hot glue castings.

  In one of my earlier careers, I was a Mold  Maker/Tool & Die Maker. Although I no longer had the machine shop equipment  available to me, I wanted to use the skills I had learned to reproduce some of  the tiny details that I had created for my contest winning dioramas.

Photo  at left:  Some Dow-Corning 3110 RTV rubber  molds with hot glue detail parts that have been sprayed with primer to make them  show up in the photo. Since this article was first published nearly 30 years  ago, there have been many additions and improvements in both the molding process  and available products for finishing and weathering hot glue castings. Some of  these updates are included in the Addendum pages in this booklet.

  So I thought I would try this method. I made  RTV molds, and spent many hours trying to cram plastic beads into their tiny  cavities and melt them down. I had very little success, and decided that this  process was not for me.

 Photo at Right: The barrels  and the auto in the foreground of the photo of the author’s HO scale J. W. Wenrick Manufactory diorama were cast using hot glue and RTV rubber molds.

  The idea came to me that I needed to find  an inexpensive way to inject some substance into the tiny cavities in my RTV  molds. I wanted to devise a process that was easy to do and would use materials  and equipment readily available to the average modeler. I knew it had to be  relatively inexpensive if model railroaders were going to use it, because they  love to use lots of details.

Photo at Left: One of the most challenging hot  glue casting efforts was casting the nearly 200 windows for the Ferry-Morse Seed  Co. diorama and then painting the individual window mullions for all of the  nearly 200 windows. Some windows looked much better than others. One of the  really positive things about casting hot glue windows is that the window pane is  cast in clear hot glue, and if done successfully, it sort of looks like wavy  glass. Another benefit is that when the hot glue gun tip is dragged across the  mold to create the glazing, it is possible to remove small pieces (of what would  be the glazing) to create the appearance of broken glass.

  That is when I thought of hot glue guns. Why  not use one to inject hot glue into an RTV mold? The guns melt a silicon wax  substance to 300-350 degrees Fahrenheit. RTV rubber is designed to withstand  temperatures in excess of 800 degrees. Both substances are silicone based, so  they would not stick to each other. Or would they?

  Photo at Right: This  front view of the Indian River Fruit Co. diorama illustrates more varieties of  details that may be cast using a hot glue gun. Two-part molds do not work as  well, due to the probably of capturing air bubbles when the two mold halves are  pressed together. Also, creating an acceptable casting requires repeated efforts  in order to cast a detail that is complete and quasi-flawless. Most everything  in the photo is a hot glue casting save the window frames and the mailbox.

  The only way to find out was to try it.  Here I describe the process I worked out. The photos included in this technique  show the many variations and possible results of using this process.

Photo  at Left: The below close-up image of earliest hot glue casting truck cabs and  chassis illustrates the less-than-perfect castings; yet with acceptable  additions, they make a believable scene

  You may never realize how many headaches  I have saved you bydescribing the ins and outs of this very innovative  technique. If you have guts enough to try it, I bet you will be surprised by how  many different things you can replicate.

  The above images and text are short  excerpts from this How-To booklet. The information found in this booklet may not  aid in curing world hunger, but this booklet may contain just enough ideas and  thought to spur your model thought process to consider alternative techniques  and ideas.

  Should you choose to try this Hot  Glue Casting technique, we invite you to share your trials and  tribulations; successes and failures with us. Who knows, you may even create a  whole new process that has not been discussed in this booklet. We hope so  because we are also interested in learning new techniques and it all begins with  communication!

Doctor Ben's Scale Consortium Products are Developed  Directly from the Creations of NMRA National Award Winning Dioramas by Richard E. (Ben) Bendever

Here are links to more Doctor Ben's Products in this Store:

- Scale Building Material- Fine Scale Tools - Fine Scale Products- Weathering Solutions - Weathering Pigments - Weathering Stains- How-To DVDs - Scale Scenery

 

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