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Vacuum Forming

A project log for Round Things

This project will be a multiple layer display of round things

simply7Simply7 07/07/2014 at 01:480 Comments

This part of the project was designing a good master to perform all the vacuum forming. This was the first time I had ever done any vacuum forming so I did a lot of reading but still made a lot of mistakes.  When I had actually made my first acceptable piece, I had a pile of about 7 failures. 

The initial acrylic piece I designed worked okay when I did the vacuform but getting to release was difficult. When cutting with a laser you get kerf, this is a small angle to the cut cause by several different factors. So each piece had a slight angle and stacking them together made the equivalent of a saw blade. In this picture you can see it as a little offset.


This was solved by using a disc sander and setting it to 87 degrees.  With this slight angle the piece came out easily. The second issue is the 90 degree angle at the top. When the soft styrene is pulled over the 90 degree angle it thins to the point where it cracks easily.  A little more sanding  and that issue was resolved as well.


I designed the new model with air vents to allow evacuation of air where it could possibly form pockets. This drawing shows the multiple layers of acrylic and the venting areas.

For a more detailed view, I'm including the Corel Draw File.


I even changed the design of the vacuform top to get the maximum use of the vacuum. I also added a bolt to the bottom of the model and a locking mechanism to hold the model down to aid in removing the styrene from the model.

So step one, toss some styrene in the toaster... (I'm bad at forgetting to take pictures as I go, that's why you see some already completed hexadomes in the corner ;)


Then turn on the shop vac and place the styrene on the model. The styrene I'm using is thin and cools quickly, so I sometimes use a heat gun to heat it back up while the shop vac is running. This often helps 'save' a piece that wouldn't normally make it. This would go much smoother if I had a proper vacuform table, but that's another project.


Tun everything off and pull the styrene from the frame and make the first rough cuts.  I had received good advice on how to cut these with scissors, but  glued a base to my model and not the table.  So I ended up cutting with a razor

Then very carefully make the finishing cuts and the finished piece.

 Once the cut was complete, I placed it back on the vacuum platform and used a piece of tape to lift the finished hexadome off the model.

Here is the finished piece next to an early prototype of the base.

So after making the first one, JD gave me a few neopixels and I ran a very simple arduino sketch to see how it would look.

So these round things were originally going to be part of a indoor art piece weather station, informing me of what was going on outside.  While sitting right next to a sliding glass door...  But with most of my projects they tend to grow and change as I have new ideas.  So, I'm going to hit ebay for some Nitendo guns (think Duck Hunt) and rename this the  'Paint Ball Wall of Lights'.   Hopefully I'll come up with a better name, but you get the point.

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