A couple of days ago I decided that I should finish the scenery on the recently added outer teardrop section of the layout so after some thought I took myself off to Bunnings to get a can of expanding foam. The reason for this was that I had a plaster shell of the old scenery near the road bridge that was unsupported by the new fascia which was now about 150mm away. I thought that filling it with foam would be the way to go. I squirted the foam underneath the over hanging plaster shell and continued to do so until it was filled, I then put some blocks of expanded polystyrene between the expanding foam and the fascia, mistake!
I didn't find the problem until after I came back to the layout after some lunch.
Here is the result:
I cut the eruption off and found that there was still gooey foam being extruded from the centre. This is still coming out 24 hours later as I write this but only a small amount now, about the size of a playing marble.
When the foam expanded it broke the plaster shell away from the baseboard below the road overbridge causing the bridge to warp and be on a grade as well.
Now I had to remove the bridge and repair it, luckily it isn't the Laser Rail Bits bridge that I am working on just an old RIX plastic one made to look NSWGR.
I had also tried to apply the foam onto the MDF base to try to get a thin layer but this was not successful as it didn't want to stick and just rolled off when I tried to spread it with a spatula.
Here is the result, not very useful:
I also used some expanded polystyrene at the Wollar township end of the new scenery which is pictured here:
One good thing I can report is that the expanding foam cuts with my hot wire tool, slower than expanded polystyrene though.
Once I got everything sorted and the foam trimmed to shape I painted some PVA glue onto the foam and applied some kitchen wipes of the blue and white checked variety (cheap from Super Cheap Auto). I applied PVA glue wherever the pieces of kitchen wipe were laid over each other and also where the wipes bridged a gap between the foam.
The intention of using the foam and kitchen wipes with the PVA is to make a scenery landform that can take fence posts and the fine intermediate droppers easily. I use fine wire pushed into the scenery to represent the droppers that are tied onto the wires to keep them apart and from sagging, probably also to stop stock from stepping through the wires.
Part of the new scenery is only about 5-6mm thick and since the expanding foam idea didn't work I realised that I would have to fill this large area with plaster. The problem with this is of course that it would require holes to be drilled into the plaster for the fence posts and the droppers, not a nice job, I have done it before.
The solution to the problem was to glue 25mm wide x 125mm long pieces of 6.5mm balsa where the fence would go. The plaster will be used to fill to the top edge of the balsa and I can easily push the fine droppers into the balsa, posts will be drilled and glued.
Here is a photo of the work so far:
Mission accomplished!
1 day ago
8 comments:
Ray
Looks like you had the Michelin man stand up behind the hills.
The expanding foam is great for some purposes but, the way it expands can be a real issue as you have found, best place is sealing areas for drafts & keep dust out.
Although if one was modelling say Bombo or similar oceand frontage railway could work for the storm surge froth.
All looking good though, as some experiments work, others give some humour at best.
Col
Colin
Yes, I have used it around the house for sealing between the brickwork and the concrete floor to keep out the unwanted ones but forgot how much it keeps expanding.
I thought it would be worth a laugh or two.
Ray
Ray,
Many thanks for the 'lesson learnt'.
You mentioned putting Styrofoam blocks adjacent to the expanding foam. Did that combination contribute to the reaction or was it simply the use of the expanding foam product? I only ask because I am one who makes extensive use of Styrofoam for scenery formation and it seems that for me, based on your experience, expanding foam is a product best avoided.
cheers Phil
Oh, dear! I'm glad that you could laugh about this, it really is a plutonic effect...quite realistic if you were modelling the line 500 million years ago, but...
Your idea for the fence substructure is great, the balsa will be ideal for that. Talking of polystyrene - on my very first layout back when I was sixteen, I foolishly painted areas of foam with oil paint. It ate the scenery away over the course of the night and as this was in my bedroom, made me very ill. I can still recall the awful pong! However, used sensibly as you have, it's a great medium. I also like your method of using the cheap "J Cloths" as they are known over here, for ground contours...brilliant!
Phil
No, there wasn't any reaction with the expanded polystyrene, just don't try to fill with the foam as it comes out, leave it for a while and let it expand. My problem was that the foam went off on the outside and the expanding foam inside forced it's way out.
Ray
Iain
Glad you had a laugh and I did something similar with the expanded polystyrene and some oil based paint on one of my first layouts several decades ago but it was in the garage during daytime.
Ray
Ray,
Still having a chuckle...When I originally saw the photos I was not sure whether it was some rare footage of the Japanese Tsunami...or a cheap remake of "The Blob"...Either way it would have been a shock to return to. What is next...Putting a 32 Class inside a milk bottle? Just keep having fun Julius!!!
Regards, Rod
Rod
Glad it brightened up your day ;-)
Ray
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