Materials
& Methods
To help your first use of a new material have the best chance of success,
please:
- Study. Read as much "how to"
literature as possible.
- Test Pour. Make a small mold or casting
before attempting an important piece. Small Trial Units are available
for your experimentation.
- Start Small. Get a feel for the materials
without costly mistakes on an important job.
- Ask Questions. We can't tell you how
to make molds and castings over the phone, but we want to answer
any specific questions you have. If you are not sure, please call
and ask.
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Moldmaking
& Casting Materials
Polytek produces nearly all kinds of flexible mold materials in
common use, as well as Polypoxy®, Poly Urethane and wax casting
materials.
Flexible mold materials range from simple, one
part latex (the natural product of the rubber tree), Hydrogel®
N (alginate, a powder to which water is added), and Skin-Wax (which
is melted and used at less than 135ƒF), to the higher performance
two part Poly Sulfides, Poly Urethanes and Poly-Sil® Silicone
mold rubbers. The two part systems are all room temperature vulcanizing
(RTV).
Poly Urethane RTVs are the least expensive while
Poly Sulfides are intermediate and Poly-Sil® Silicones are
the highest cost, perhaps twice the cost of most Poly Urethanes.
The most common and least expensive casting materials
are gypsum plasters, which are available in many formulas for different
end uses, and cement compositions, which are often mixed by the
users.
Waxes are castable, of course, but uses are limited
by low hardness and high shrinkage. Low melting alloys of some metals
and Poly-Vinyl plastisols can be cast in heat resistant silicone
molds.
Epoxy and Poly Urethane, two part resin systems,
offer tremendous versatility. Polyester resin is a common two-part
casting material and is quite low in cost, especially if low cost
fillers like sand, limestone or wood flour are added. Polyester
resins have the disadvantage of flammability and strong odor in
the liquid state and high shrinkage during cure.
After study of our literature and some experimenting,
you will learn the differences, advantages and disadvantages of
each material.
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Moldmaking
& Casting Methods
Each molding and casting compound is unique and requires handling
in a special way which may be different from other similar products.
Time spent learning the special requirements of every new product
and making a small test mix before using the product on a larger
scale will help avoid loss of valuable time and materials.
Molds are generally made by POURING the
liquid rubber over a model, surrounded by a box or shell, or by
BRUSHING thickened rubber onto the model and building a shell
to hold the blanket mold in shape after the rubber has cured.
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Poured
Molds
Most flexible molds are poured molds.
One of the simplest molds is to build a box around
a model and pour on the mold material which sets to a rubber or
rigid substance. More complex molds can be cut with a sharp knife
from a solid block of soft mold material or poured into preconstructed
shells over a model. Molds can also be poured in sections, by pouring
on one surface at a time, allowing to cure, then pouring on the
adjoining surface against the previous pour. Of course, molds can
be poured into a shell and cut into sections as well.
Poured molds are sometimes free standing if the
rubber is thick enough to hold its shape, but often the box or shell
is used with the mold to maintain the desired shape. Generally,
the box or shell (mother mold) must be removable from the rubber
mold.
Poured mold materials generally pick up detail
with fewer entrapped air bubbles than brushed on molds, except where
bubbles on the surface of the rising liquid are trapped under a
ledge such as under the chin of a head model. If this is a major
problem, a brushed-on mold, or pouring one section at a time may
be preferable.
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Permanent
Shell & Model
Molds for high production of many pieces are often made with a PERMANENT
SHELL and MODEL. The shell and model should be made of a durable
material like Poly 15-3X Casting Resin. The shell is positioned
over the model on a base that locks the shell and model in position.
A liquid mold rubber is poured in the space between to form a flexible
mold. The shell and mold are used on the production line. When the
rubber fails (as all flexible molds eventually do) the shell is
simply repositioned over the model and a new mold is poured, ready
for use the next day.
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Brush-on
Molds
Most pourable mold rubbers can be thickened for use to produce brush-on
molds. Trying to brush-on a pourable liquid without thickening usually
will not be satisfactory, because the liquid will flow off vertical
surfaces. Some mold compounds such as Polygel®, Latex and pre-thickened
mold compounds are only suitable for brush-on molds. Brush-on molds
are generally faster to make and offer the moldmaker visual control
of rubber placement. Brushed-on molds generally use less mold material,
as the mold is thinner than a poured mold.
The shell (mother mold) is usually made over and
is removable from the brushed-on mold. Care must be taken that a
rigid shell does not lock onto undercuts in the brushed-on mold.
All such undercuts must be eliminated or the shell must be made
in multiple pieces to work around them. Flexible mother molds sometimes
offer a good solution to undercuts.
Shims or flanges are used to create seams or parting
lines where required on brush-on molds and shells.
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Casting
For simple solid casts, the flexible mold and shell (if required)
are positioned so the opening is level and release agent, barrier
coat or rinse is applied, if necessary. The casting material is
poured right to the top edge, vibrated if necessary and allowed
to cure. Most casts should be removed as soon as they are adequately
set, as longer residence times can damage some mold materials.
Use of vacuum or pressure, brushing, spraying or
heated molds are all helpful techniques to eliminate bubbles and
achieve perfect casts of highly detailed parts, but simple pours
are often adequate.
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Starting
Materials You May Need
For a very simple mold or casting you may need the following materials.
Bold items are sold by Polytek, see the *****Accessory Section
of the on-line store.
To make Poured Block Molds, No Mold Shell
Your non-porous model, non-porous base board (laminate- coated sink
cutout), mold box around model (non-porous sides), plasticene (to
seal edges), Pol-Ease® 2300 Release Agent, Trial Unit
Poly 74-30, plastic mixing pail, mixing paddle, scale or
measuring cups, rubber gloves, paper towels.
To make Brush-On Mold with Plaster Mold Shell
Your non-porous model, non-porous base board, plasticene, shim material,
Trial Unit Polygel® 40 and/or 50, Pol-Ease®
2300 Release Agent, plastic mixing pails or paper hot cups,
mixing paddle, throw- away brushes, scale or measuring cups, rubber
gloves, paper towels, plaster for mold shell.
To make Cold Cast Bronze
Rubber mold, Pol-Ease® 2300 Release Agent, Polypoxy®
1010 and Poly Cure 1212, bronze powder, scale, mixing
cups (paper hot cups are excellent), disposable brush, mixing sticks
(tongue depressors or spatulas), very fine steel wool, oil paint
(for patina).
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