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Post Info TOPIC: Rivets


Sergeant

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Rivets
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What ho chaps,

Mililtary Modelcraft International (Feb 2008) has an article by Domi Jadoul of Retrokits fame,using 3-D fabric paint to make rivets.

Can't wait to get started;I never thought I'd get excited by the thought of making scale rivets!

TTFN,
Marcus

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Colonel

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hi Marcus ,

Which scale do you use ? If 1:16 for example there are original rivets in steel ,and every
other sort of metal. Cheap to get from the industrial grocery and not from this modell
neck cut offs !

Best regards

Gerd

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Sergeant

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Hi Gerd,

Braille scale I'm afraid,I don't have the space for larger scales.

I wasn't looking forward to using the guts of a water filter cartridge;so if it's good enough for Domi,I guess it will do for me!

TTFN,
Marcus

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Field Marshal

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Getting a solution to this age-old problem (for Braille-Scalers that is) would entitle Domi J. a place in the Braille Scale Hall of Fame!

Hope someone can give more details!

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/Peter Kempf


Corporal

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BTW another good solution are the rivets of Archer Fine Transfers. They consist of black, three dimensional resin rivets on decal film. The ease of appliance is incredible, they are a little pricey however (I'm in no way connected with the producer)


AR88001.gif




-- Edited by fabe at 17:50, 2008-02-10

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Legend

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A technique I've used in braille scale is as follows...

Mark up on your styrene sheet or part where you want your rivets. Drill a hole for each rivet using the thinnest drill you can find.

Take thin styrene rod (I think it's 0.25mm and reddish brown). Light a tea candle, and approach the flame with the tip of the rod. It will melt and 'blob'. As soon as it does this, withdraw from the flame - you want the smallest blob, and the longer it stays in, the more rod melts and the bigger the blob.

You now have a sort of 'mushroom' head to the rod. Cut it off with a couple of millimetres of 'tail'.

Insert into pre-drilled hole, and apply liquid cement to the other side of your styrene sheet or part; capillary action will draw the cement in and fasten the rivet.

Practise achieves fairly consistently sized rivets.

Below is the result on an Airfix Mk I I 'accurised' (God, what an ugly word...):



A variation would be to buy Grandt Line styrene rivets; the smallest (for HO trains) are 0.5mm in diameter and they come in packs of 200 for $2.13:

http://www.internettrains.com/merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=IT&Product_Code=TTG-8017&Category_Code=SBSNBWTTG&Featured=

I've not tried them yet, but I plan to order a few packs.



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Sergeant

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Wow!

Thanks for that chaps.

What a can of worms has been opened!I've got a craft shop just by me,so I'm planning to get some of this paint tomorrow & I'll let you know how it goes.

TTFN,

Marcus

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Sergeant

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I've been getting pretty decent results using epoxy and a toothpick.

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Colonel

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fabe wrote:

BTW another good solution are the rivets of Archer Fine Transfers. They consist of black, three dimensional resin rivets on decal film. The ease of appliance is incredible, they are a little pricey however (I'm in no way connected with the producer)


AR88001.gif




-- Edited by fabe at 17:50, 2008-02-10



A dream come true - especially when I'm going to have to rivet a pair of Mk1 male sponsons at some point in the near future.

Do you have the web address of any UK dealer that sells them?



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Hero

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Historex agents sell them I think
Paul

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