Scale Model Basics: Working with resin

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Welcome to FineScale Modeler magazine's Scale Model Basics: Working with Resin! In this episode, editor Aaron Skinner teaches the safety tips you need to know and the best ways to perfect your resin pieces and parts.
    00:09 Intro
    00:25 Pour Stubs
    01:05 How to remove pour stubs
    01:40 🥽⚠️ SAFETY ⚠️🥽
    02:48 Removing pour stubs (cont.)
    03:19 Sanding and scraping off the pour stub remnants
    04:17 Clean-up of excess material
    05:02 Dealing with thin, delicate resin parts
    06:48 Attaching resin parts
    08:06 Working with larger resin parts
    08:41 Pinning
    11:32 Checking the pin's fit
    13:05 Adjusting the pin
    14:05 Attaching the pinned part with 2-part epoxy glue
    15:29 Finished pins
    15:55 What else can you pin?
    16:32 Wrap-up
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Комментарии • 42

  • @rafaelontiveros7450
    @rafaelontiveros7450 4 месяца назад

    First time buying a small model kit made from resin, years ago, I never understood what was with that solid part, that couldn't be removed with an Exacto knife. I never messed with it again, now I know what's up after this video. Maybe I'll buy some aftermarket resin parts for my kits. Sigh, this hobby was a lot cheaper, back then.

  • @Maxtherocketguy
    @Maxtherocketguy 8 месяцев назад +1

    wont a little bit of water stop the thing from making dust

  • @henryhbk
    @henryhbk 3 месяца назад +1

    As a doctor who pulls bits of metal out of patients’ eyes all the time, please wear goggle when cutting the pin, or you’re unable to get an MRI for the rest of your life (even brass is a problem not because it is magnetic but because it is conductive it will heat up)

  • @shane142
    @shane142 2 года назад +3

    Be good to see the same sort of item to do with 3d printed parts for model kitsets. As a lot of glues and cements will not hold. Example FDM (Fused Deposition Modelling) using PLA, PETG and some other filament even super glue sometime has issues with some of the filaments of this type.
    Resin 3D printers produce a lot of different issues as well. But there are a few tricks to get around this as well. But in many cases with different resins and manufactures type.
    You need to handle the parts different to how you handle it in some respects and steps as you would per this item. A good example is large item may be semi hollow to save on resin or the resin is not fully hardened up by UV light in the center of the part. That one alone gives different issues again, as the raw unset resin. You should not let contact your skin as it's semi toxic. So latex gloves are necessary when you find an issue like that.
    Don't get me wrong I enjoyed this item very much and everything is valid.

    • @FineScaleModelermagazine
      @FineScaleModelermagazine  2 года назад +3

      Definitely, 3D-printed resin is different than cast resin. We'll cover 3D-printed resin in a different video.

  • @terrybaptist795
    @terrybaptist795 7 месяцев назад +1

    Very nice video but how about how to bond resin to polystyrene on 1:24 or 1:25 scale model cars?

  • @MEATLOAFr
    @MEATLOAFr 2 года назад +2

    Need a mention to differentiate between casted resin and 3D printing resin, they feel completely different

    • @FineScaleModelermagazine
      @FineScaleModelermagazine  2 года назад +1

      True. The two resins are very different. But if we were talking 3D-printed resin, we would have made the distinction. Still, this model was cast resin. Thanks for watching!

  • @terrybaptist795
    @terrybaptist795 7 месяцев назад +1

    Is using a dremel to cut off the stub a good or bad idea

    • @FineScaleModelermagazine
      @FineScaleModelermagazine  7 месяцев назад +1

      The answer is it depends: You can use a rotary tool on bigger pour stubs. On small ones, you run the risk of cutting into the part. It's also a messy process with a rotary tool with dust going everywhere.

  • @belfast4893
    @belfast4893 6 месяцев назад

    So I have multiple resin parts on a rectangle stub. Is it a good idea to cut the stubs into blocks with a snippers before removing the actual part with a razor saw ?

  • @henryhbk
    @henryhbk 3 месяца назад

    For the frame part I might have cut it on a cut mat with an x-acto blade like a photo etched part

  • @jeremyfugarino7901
    @jeremyfugarino7901 Год назад +1

    Another way would drill the hole and leave a mm of copper out and push the leg piece on and make an indentation which will give you a guide to wear to better place the hole on the leg.

  • @robertjensen1438
    @robertjensen1438 2 года назад +2

    Just a comment for the algorithm

  • @albertmacias1862
    @albertmacias1862 Год назад +1

    Is there some kind of solvent that will work with this resin?

    • @FineScaleModelermagazine
      @FineScaleModelermagazine  Год назад +2

      Not well. You're basically down to superglue or 2-part epoxy. There are some 3D-printer resins that reportedly work with solvent cements, but we have not independently confirmed this. -TK

  • @lesthiele4921
    @lesthiele4921 2 года назад +1

    Not trying to tell you what to do, but I would have used wet 'n' dry sandpaper and keep it wet, apart from that I enjoy these little tutorials, best regards to you and the team at FSM, from Australia.

  • @c123bthunderpig
    @c123bthunderpig 2 года назад +2

    Excellent tips, especially as I have just re-entered model building after a long sabbatical and so much has changed in kits and materials . You even have to acquire new tools , Just got one of those saws and it works great, the pinning is also a handy tip I've been surprised about the use of epoxy and new glues..

  • @clydelourensz4077
    @clydelourensz4077 Год назад +1

    Hey Aaron, thanks for a concise video on working with resin.
    How would recommend getting a clean straight edge when cutting the resin from the casting block?
    I’ve stuffed a few pieces as I’ve ended up with a crooked gap, which even when puttied looks a bit average.

  • @michaelbaker2552
    @michaelbaker2552 5 месяцев назад

    I would like to see a segment on painting 1/48 scale figures. There are a lot of such figures out there in 1/48 and I have no idea how to approach them.

  • @charlie418791
    @charlie418791 2 года назад +1

    Build on , brotha

  • @waynestarick5282
    @waynestarick5282 2 года назад +3

    I always hold the pour stub as that often isn’t as flimsy as the resin part itself

  • @hacheyp
    @hacheyp 2 года назад +1

    This was a really good one! Thanks!

  • @ancliuin2459
    @ancliuin2459 5 месяцев назад

    Why have I not thought of the bigger hole on the other side before... I have never tried pinning because I thought I could never achieve the working precision to make two holes fit the pin on both sides. Now I'm set, thanks a lot!

  • @PlasticImaginationWorkshop
    @PlasticImaginationWorkshop 2 года назад +2

    Another great tutorial, thank you. I know this will also help out a lot of folks. I also use pins when I'm attaching figures to a base for added durability and strength. Thanks again, have a great weekend. -David

  • @vinicius.schmidt
    @vinicius.schmidt 2 года назад +2

    Very detailed, precise and at the same time concise. I appreciate your effort and the knowledge sharing with us. Thanks.

  • @deelee9712
    @deelee9712 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for doing this video. Makes working with resin less intimidating.

  • @larrydee8859
    @larrydee8859 2 года назад +1

    Great Lesson;
    I too have been out of the hobby for many many years and now see, with these newer kits, that there's a lot of multimedia being used requiring crazy glue and epoxy.