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www.TK560.com Vacuum Forming, Movie Prop, Sci-fi and GIjOE Forum
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 10:11 am Post subject: fun with craft foam (EVA foam), w/pictures |
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(Continued from another thread...)
I'm not vacuum forming foam-backed vinyls, or other pre-laminated stuff; that sounds very tricky. I'm vacuum forming vinyl sheet foams.
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Was the vinyl of the type you see in automotive interiors? Kinda spongy after forming? Can you post some pics of the stuff?
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Sintra (a slighly-foamed rigid vinyl "sign foam") wouldn't be good in cars. Its thermoforming temperature is so low that it would be somewhat soft and weak in a hot car on a sunny day. (It's mostly used for interior signage.)
EVA foam may be used in cars; I'm not sure. It's a rubbery vinyl (Ethylene Vinyl Acetate) foam that's used for a whole lot of things, in different thicknesses and densities. (Camp mats, flip flops, athletic shoe soles, padding for sports gear, cushioned grips for tool handles, floor cushioning tiles for workshops and play areas, etc.)
It's easy to get for experiments because it's sold in 9 x 12 and 12 x 18 sheets as "craft foam," in lots of colors and three thicknesses---2, 3, and 6 mm. (Unfortunately, the 6mm only seems to come in 9 x 12 sheets.)
So far, I've only done limited experiments. I can do the 2 & 3 mm foams just fine with my little over-and-under, heating from one side. It's suprisingly easy, as long as you don't expect the stuff to sag.
I played with the 6mm some, but the smoke made me stop---to heat it from both sides, I was using my kitchen oven, and I don't want vinyl smoke residues in the food. I intend to build a double-sided vacuum former oven at some point, maybe soon, and then I'll play with it more.
These are the only pictures of foam stuff I have up and linkable---experiments using life casts as bucks.
This one shows a plaster face cast (where most of the "detail" is flaws in the cast), and a 3mm and a 6 mm foam sheet formed over it:
These was done before I set up the high-vac, so he detail isn't good, especially on the 6 mm (black) one, which didn't really suck down. That gave a kind of ugly-and-disturbing-but-kinda-cool hockey-mask effect, so we made some halloween masks out of them, and a photographer at a party took our picture:
(That's where my avatar picture came from.)
If you cook the 2 mm stuff long and slow, it cooks down to about 1 mm thick and gets sorta leathery rather than foamy, with a nice surface texture. (That may be a bad idea, and the plastic may deteriorate after being overcooked like that, but at least at first it's kinda cool.)
Here's one of those:
I have some more recent 3mm ones using the high vac, with better detail, but no pictures yet. I'm pretty sure the 6mm will suck down fine with high vac, too. With a good oven, I'm optimistic I can do 3/8" stuff and maybe 1/2".
Here's what happens when you cook craft foam a little too hot for a little too long---it just starts to disintegrate, without ever sagging:
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jegner Site Admin
Joined: 30 May 2003 Posts: 2144 Location: Texas, USA
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 10:53 am Post subject: |
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Great info! Thanks Dr. Crash for sharing! EVA foam may be just the ticket for a friend of mine that is doing clone trooper feet.
I know that Anthony Daniels wore a soft foam butt/groin sections for his C3-PO that was vac-metal chromed just like the rest of his gold parts. The results are great.
I wonder if this EVA foam comes in large sheets?
JIm |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 11:15 am Post subject: |
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I wonder if this EVA foam comes in large sheets?
Definitely. It's used for all kinds of stuff industrially, where they cut stuff out of big sheets or rolls, and either use it flat, or thermoform it, or wrap it around something with glue to hold it.
I'm not sure where to buy it in small quantities, though. I need to poke around more.
Here's one thing I stumbled across that had single-sheet prices listed. (I hate those all pages where they say "call for a quote" and don't tell you if they have a minimum order!)
http://www.esdproducts.biz/Packaging/Conductive_Foam/conductive_foam.html
They're selling conductive EVA in 37 x 57 inch sheets. (Why those dimensions? No idea.) The 1/8" foam is 18.50 and the 1/4" is $37.
I'm sure there are cheaper places to get the stuff, especially if you don't need conductive foam, but I haven't really looked.
I'm pretty sure I came across smaller sheets for sale for making prosthetics, but they weren't particularly cheap, either.
If I knew exactly what I wanted, I'd probably just call up our local foams distributor; they have or can get pretty much any kind of plastic or rubber foam, but I wouldn't be surprised if they have a $100 minimum order. |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 12:27 pm Post subject: |
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Here's a place that sells 40" x 80" sheets of charcoal gray EVA foam.
http://www.foamorder.com/closedcell.html
The 1/8" stuff is 23.25 plus 7.50 shipping for one sheet. (Shipping is the same for up to three sheets.)
The 1/4" stuff is 24.75 plus 7.50 shipping for one sheet.
They also have thicker EVA (up to 4") and they say that they have 48" x 72" sheets but for those "certain minimums apply." |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 12:40 pm Post subject: |
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Here's one of the places that sells EVA foam sheets for prosthetics, in a variety of colors (including multicolor swirls) and awkward sheet sizes. Nice variety of thicknesses. No prices listed; you can request their catalog online.
http://www.jmsplastics.com/thermoplastic/jFoam.html |
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Vortilon Newbie
Joined: 11 Nov 2006 Posts: 10 Location: Marana AZ
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Posted: Sat Nov 18, 2006 8:34 pm Post subject: |
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Great stuff thanks!! You inspire me to build a more complex over under machine. Thanks for the link to the Starship modeler I have been helping him with some of his aerodynamic difficulties. I have asked why he changed course and went to balsa but haven't got a response yet. I thought the foam version was way cool. I think a balsa structure covered with a thin vacuum formed polystyrene shell might be the ticket. So many ideas so little time!
Rick _________________ We the unwilling, led by the unqualified have been doing the impossible now with so little for so long we now feel we can do anything with nothing. |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:35 pm Post subject: |
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I just noticed that McMaster-Carr sells gray EVA foam in various thicknesses (including 1/8", 1/4", 3/8", & 1/2") in 47 x 29 inch sheets. The 1/4" is a little under $16 a sheet, and the 1/8" is about $8.50. They also have 12 x 12 inch sheets. _________________ Paul (a.k.a. Dr. Crash)
Tired of buying cheap plastic crap? Now you can make your own! www.VacuumFormerPlans.com |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 7:43 pm Post subject: |
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OOOPS. Never mind.
I just noticed the stuff at McMaster is textured both sides, so it's probably useless for most vacuum forming purposes. (But not all; if you're making a cushioned liner or other kind of inner layer, it might not matter.) _________________ Paul (a.k.a. Dr. Crash)
Tired of buying cheap plastic crap? Now you can make your own! www.VacuumFormerPlans.com |
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sethb6025 Novice
Joined: 10 Nov 2006 Posts: 46 Location: York, PA
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Posted: Fri Dec 22, 2006 5:58 pm Post subject: |
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That is very interesting, thanks for sharing your results! I had an idea for a Halloween costume, and I was even thinking of craft foam for a few of the parts, but it never occurred to me that it could be vac-formable. If nothing else, it seems to make a cool mask. |
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remarque Newbie
Joined: 06 Oct 2006 Posts: 22 Location: The Carolinas
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Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 3:55 pm Post subject: |
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How strong is the foam after it has been formed and let to cool? |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Tue Dec 26, 2006 8:06 am Post subject: |
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Quote: | I'm not vacuum forming foam-backed vinyls, or other pre-laminated stuff; that sounds very tricky. |
I probably shouldn't have said/thought that. Thinking about it more, I'm guessing that some of the laminates designed for thermoforming are pretty easy to vacuum form. (And if you know where to get them relatively cheaply in small quantities, let me know...)
That would probably be the way to go, for a lot of purposes---easier than hassling with laminating things yourself.
Paul _________________ Paul (a.k.a. Dr. Crash)
Tired of buying cheap plastic crap? Now you can make your own! www.VacuumFormerPlans.com |
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drcrash Guru
Joined: 04 Sep 2006 Posts: 705 Location: Austin, Texas
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Posted: Tue Dec 26, 2006 8:19 am Post subject: |
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remarque wrote: | How strong is the foam after it has been formed and let to cool? |
It's not "strong" at all in the sense of being rigid. It's still a rubbery foam.
It's also not very strong on the surface---it's easy to dent or scuff it. It's not like vinyl that you'd put on a chair seat, or make a real shoe out of.
I think for those kinds of purposes, there are easily-vacuum-formed vinyls out there, but I haven't done the research to figure out what to get and where to get it cheaply in small quantities.
For making more rigid structures, some people vacuum form extruded polystyrene foam, but it's tricky---at least if you use the very light stuff RC modelers usually use. You have to heat it very evenly, or you mess up hotter parts of it before the cooler parts get hot enough all the way through.
(Or it could be that none of those guys has built a good oven, and it's not really all that hard if your oven is even decent. Regular polystyrene is very forgiving, and it's not really clear to me why foamed polystyrene shouldn't be fairly forgiving, too, like EVA foam. But I may be missing something.)
I'm thinking that denser and thinner extruded polystyrene foam might be much easier to heat & form, because it would conduct heat better. If it was as easy to form as EVA, that would be great, so long as you didn't need the extreme lightness modelers sometimes want. (Even for flying models, I'd think you could usually use denser and thinner foam for the skin, if you have a few spars and ribs/bulkheads.) _________________ Paul (a.k.a. Dr. Crash)
Tired of buying cheap plastic crap? Now you can make your own! www.VacuumFormerPlans.com |
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radnd838 Newbie
Joined: 23 Feb 2011 Posts: 5
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Posted: Wed Feb 23, 2011 3:50 pm Post subject: |
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Thanks for posting the link for where we can purchase the EVA foam. It's nice to be able to get recommendations and tips from people who are experienced, since I am new to the business. I appreciate any helpful tips and hints! _________________ I love candy!
www.gumball-machine.com |
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