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Frank, I also bet that with warm weather coming, leaving the splines in the sun would make for eaiser bending too for someone with smaller curves. I would also consider a 45 degree angle on the ends to create a "glueable" overlap, much the way a long piece of moulding is installed where a joint is required along a long wall. Carpenters eliminate a butt-joint this way.
One concern I'd have about foam splines is strength. Some of us are clumsy, and I'd hate to see what might happen if one stumbled and instinctively reached out to grab a spline and---
I also tested the spline to see how tight a radius it could form...I think that radius is actually smaller than 3". The parabolic shape the spline took results in a VERY tight curve with easements. I went smaller but the spline snapped. I'm pretty confident that the typical curve radius used on a small N scale layout could be constructed without issue.Real construction of the new roadbed begins tomorrow. I'll keep you updated here and at Milepost 15 (http://kelticsylk.blogspot.com/)
You could finish off the outsides of the spline with a strip of luaun to add vertical stiffness.Great Idea on the cutting fixture!
What he said. One solution: a hot wire cutter. You can get them that look like a jigsaw cutter for slicing large sheets into strips. Or, I also use a packing knife. But sawing foam? Nope.One concern I'd have about foam splines is strength. Some of us are clumsy, and I'd hate to see what might happen if one stumbled and instinctively reached out to grab a spline and---
Yep, this is it. This is what I plan on using for my layout. Waterproof, lightweight and inexpensive. I'll add this to my PVC benchwork idea and i can eliminate wood almost entirley.In addition to glue, I see you use black bolts to hold everything together. I am thinking some sort of plastic bolt, like the friction bolts that hold interior door panels onto vehicles. Also, what about a small luaun platform supports under the spline? This would spread any shock received by heavy objects falling on the roadbed.
Bet that saw would look like this!: I made it for cutting all the foam on my railroad.Just a table made from wood/masonite,and a loop made from 1/4 inch steel rod stock.The cutting wire is Woodland Scenics,the power supply is from an old Power Wheels kids car.I actually did all the longer,straight cuts in my garage with a small,battery powered saw with a razor sharp carbide blade.Really didn't seem to make much dust,but I did do it with the garage door open,LOL!!!
Like DKS, I worry about the strength of Styrofoam splined subroadbed and the sag photos you've posted clearly indicate it's not very rigid (to say the least). Yup, it'd help to put something with more structural strength on the outsides and in the middle, but the Styrofoam is not really great as a structural element in anything designed to be stable....which is what model railroad subroadbed is supposed to be.
In the model-railroad press, I've seen Masonite splines with spacer blocks used to support Homasote roadbed, which is heavier and more likely to sag than foam.Filling the open space between spacers with foam instead of air will certainly be at least as strong.