JoeDios.com Forums

JoeDios.com Forums (https://www.joedios.com/forum/index.php)
-   JoeDioes.com Forum (https://www.joedios.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   how to make molds (https://www.joedios.com/forum/showthread.php?t=591)

lehsreh 02-27-2007 11:14 AM

how to make molds
 
a few months ago i saw someone make a homemade mold of a joe action figure. i really dont remember where i saw this or who did it. if anyone knows a place that shows how to do this or anything helpfull, please let me know.

Sonneilon 02-27-2007 11:29 AM

First off, if you can find Phu (who is a member here), talk to him. Jay (smokescreen on the JBL) also does their own molds. These two guys are still learning how to do stuff. You can try and talk to Alyosha who does his own thing but from what I've heard, he's hard to get ahold of. There are kits you can buy and it's possible to do on your own.

ender098 02-27-2007 11:40 AM

Good Stuff...check it out:


http://wiki.joecustoms.com/wiki/Casting_Guide


That what you were looking for?

lehsreh 02-27-2007 11:53 AM

yeah, these help, thanx to you both.

lehsreh 02-27-2007 02:24 PM

just wondering if anyone has tried this for a joe figure? i was wondering about the arms, you know, the pivot and stuff.

Sonneilon 02-27-2007 02:31 PM

I have the understanding that Alyosha doesn't do it all himself. He outsources a bit of stuff.

But Jay was doing his own version of Techno Vipers and I believe he was doing it all. I have no idea how. I was trying to hit him up for Leatherneck heads. If you can find Phu, PM him about stuff.

Jay 02-27-2007 02:33 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sonneilon
I have the understanding that Alyosha doesn't do it all himself. He outsources a bit of stuff.

But Jay was doing his own version of Techno Vipers and I believe he was doing it all. I have no idea how. I was trying to hit him up for Leatherneck heads. If you can find Phu, PM him about stuff.

Actually, Alyosha does it all on his own, and it's actually his "full-time job"...
It's Bekker (who also works with his father in the family business) who outsources a bit of stuff.

phu 02-27-2007 04:23 PM

It's an expensive hobby, it's not easy, and the results can be disappointing right off the bat, but I think it's a LOT of fun.

A few of the parts I've cast successfully... the guns are pretty decent, and the vests came out very well (minus the one he's wearing, which was a very early cast and done with far less flexible material than the later ones).



This is the closest I came to casting a full Joe; around the time I did this I was dropping out of the hobby for a while.





You can see the myriad tiny air bubbles throughout the plastic; it's not easy to get them out (in no small part because I was using a very fast-setting 2-part polyurethane). The joints, however, are all functional and solid, and the helmet is removable. That's also Rollbar's head Frankesteined onto Gung Ho's neck to fit into the torso correctly. I had successfully cast most of the rest of his lower body and hands, but didn't attach them.

When I stopped, I was working on a progressive mold to make Barrage-style arms -- actually casting parts of the arm directly into others. I had limited success with it.

Hopefully, I'll be getting into injection molding in the next month or so. THAT will be fun... more expensive, but more promising. ;)

kamikazi 02-27-2007 04:56 PM

I just wanna make guns. i mainly want to make a modified version of an ar 15 so any tips are appreciated.

phu 02-27-2007 05:08 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by ender098

For guns you'll want a 2-part mold... a hard mold compound is best for that, softer rubber molds don't work so well for small, rigid parts. I've never used MicroMark, but whoever wrote that guide knows a hell of a lot more than I do. ;)


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 07:00 PM.

Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.0.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.