Quoted Text
I usually fill those voids with curse words.
Hilarious!
I usually fill those voids with curse words.
I have a modeling friend who started using one of these "pens" exclusively in place of sanding sticks and was doing quite a lot of sanding. He ended up in the ER with a rash on his arm, and severe eye irritation.
Quoted TextI have a modeling friend who started using one of these "pens" exclusively in place of sanding sticks and was doing quite a lot of sanding. He ended up in the ER with a rash on his arm, and severe eye irritation.
Those pens are not intended to be used for general sanding.
As the name implies, they are meant for scratch removal or
leveling off an excessive thick edge on a decal.
General sanding with these pens is basically futile.
And most importantly READ the safety warning on the package.
Cheers,
I use a punch set to make disks out of .005 or even .010 Evergreen sheet and glue them in place. Not surprisingly punch sizes correspond to the standard ejector pin sizes, so it's usually an excellent fit. These can be sanded down flush without changing the surface contour, unlike filling with putty or sanding them out.
KL
what do you mean by a punch set?
They would be wrong
does the punch set have many uses in modeling?
My local Leather Shop also sells leather working tools. That is where I got my punch set. It consists of two mandibles and an assortment of screw in circle cutting dies of various diameters 1/16" thru 9/32". They also sell a tool that looks like a big set of pliers with a rotating wheel with various punch sizes you can select. I find I am able to position the smaller individual hand held punches more precisely and you get a greater selection of die sizes with these sets as opposed to the pliers.
Place the raw plastic stock on a forgiving surface like one of the popular work bench green cutting pads, ** position the tool and give it a light tap with a small hammer. You will now have beaucoupe disks galore!
This set was under $40 USD so I am going with these!
** The same company that makes the big cutting pads also sells a small 4" x 4" pad as shown above. I use the small one for such jobs as these and when it gets too dinged up I replace it - inexpensive enough.