Vacuum-Forming RC-Body Shells
This work-in-progress. Just wanted to let me know. :-D
The Goal
I wanted to make my own body shells, ones NO ONE has. Insane[1], I know. :)
Building
The Vacuum-Forming Tools
Boxes
I made two VacForm-Boxes: One with 50cm x 28cm and one 64cm x 34cm. Why?
- The 50cm x 28cm - sized: because I can cut 3 sheets from the supplied 1000x500mm PET-G sheets[2]
- The 64cm x 34cm - sized: because some body shells are too large for 50cmx28cm. Unfortunately I can cut only one out of above mentioned sheets.
The boxes are around 10cm high and have one 35mm - hole on the side to attach the vacuumer.
I recommend rubber seals like this: E-Profil-Seal
The finished box looks like this (and yes, drilling hundreds of 4mm-holes really bored the hell out of me):
If you have kids - great, let them help - they will be SO proud:
Frames
You also need a frame to mount the PET-G-Sheets in. Mine look like this:
The Form
Ah yes - the most important part. The positive form. I could talk hours about what to do, and what not (that is, you supply enough beverages :-D ).
TBD TBD TBD TBD
The Heater
I ended up with a box fitting my two frames. It is about 60cm high and houses two RoWi 1.2KW heaters[3] at the bottom and aluminium (YES. ALUMINIUM![4]) lining on the side walls:
The Results
TBD
The Lessons Learned
- Print the parts as big as you can, less transitions, less filling
- Filling takes more time than 3D-designing (see the Ghia's windows!)
- 140°C is about right for PET-G
- Act quickly! Heat it up, fire up the vacuumer and hat the box with the frame the fast and accurately you can!
- Footnotes:
- ↑ ...and maybe weird...
- ↑ https://www.architekturbedarf.de/kunststoffe/pet-g-transparent/
- ↑ https://toom.de/p/infrarot-quarz-heizstrahler-hqh-120031-1200-w/9350421?bbo=1&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI5fb8krqY6QIVb4BQBh0qugrgEAQYASABEgKMj_D_BwE
- ↑ Brits: Be proud of spelling it right!