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What class of sub?
What class of sub? Are they N scale?
Yeah! The etching is the cleanest I've seen. Are you saying you feed the same part through multiple times to slowly etch the details, or that you ran it many times over and over until you found the proper settings to do it in one pass? I wasn't even arguing that etching styrene should be done, but you did it well. I'll still argue that cutting styrene can be economical. I just have to get you to try the tape method to allow faster cutting! But progress is progress.
I can't say enough good things about Karin's laser skills. She consistently makes the cleanest, most intricate parts I've ever seen, and can cut parts smaller than a pin head--something the laser manufacturer wasn't aware their machines could even do.
I would be interested in more info on this sub kit.
But I have a feeling he won't be asking me to laser styrene any time in the near future!
USS Henry L. Stimson (SSBN-655) Ballistic Missile Submarine, Benjamin Franklin Class, 1:200th scale, sorry its not N, does this make it off topic? I figured you would appreciate it if I openly shared me eating crow Mike (jk). Thank you for the compliment. With a laser there is no "feeding through" as such. I left the material on the vector table and ran the beam across it multiple times at the coolest setting until I got to the depth I needed (time consuming)In my research yesterday any website that talked about cutting and etching styrene says that rastering is not recommended yet these subs required it. The cool settings allowed me to raster and the hardest part was turning the piece over in the exact position to raster 3 score lines per side on the underside so that the model builder could carefully bend the last half inch or so downward with a light touch of a heat gun. FYI the rest of the sub will be beautiful wood, they wanted the upper deck etched precisely instead of hand scribing.Economical? Perhaps if I bought in bulk but this material cost dollars per small sheet whereas I can get just about any other material for much less for the same size. The thickness was .020 and I wouldn't want to use that for a main support wall. Too flimsy. I suppose I could go thicker but I still don't see the advantage over acrylic for fine details. As for taping the cuts, the outside cuts went well and were clean, its the etching that left a but of a raised edge but the modeler will simply lightly sand it. The aft half of the deck was longer and had two rows of missile hatches which took even longer to etch carefully.That from a business partner who believes in me, something I cherish considering who he is and his level of skill and unparallelled achievements. But I have a feeling he won't be asking me to laser styrene any time in the near future! I just felt I owed it to those involved to openly admit what I had to do yesterday.