Re: General Discussion
Posted: January 23rd, 2012, 2:44 pm
Alright, thanks. I have used thin ca before and been able to build light durable structures so I think I can handle thin ca. Thanks
well, the question is where you can purchase it for special densities, or at all for that matter (in sheets/sticks of 1/16 or 1/8 or 1/32 or 1/64 or 3/32, etc.)winneratlife wrote:http://www.paulowniasupply.com/paulowni ... istics.htm
worth looking into at all?
Seems quite reasonable; definately not really heavyFaustina wrote:I recently did something new: I cut all the pieces for my tower to length, weighed the pieces, glued them together, and weighed again. Without glue, the tower weighed 9.22 grams; with glue, 9.70 grams.
Does .48 grams of glue seem reasonable, or is that really heavy?
Yup, if the chimney is leaning....much at all, it will fail early in loading. The short answer is you make it straight with a good jig- there's plenty of discussion how in this year's and last year's Tower discussions. Second part of the puzzle is getting it vertical on the base; again, there is plenty of past discussion on how to do this; one way is with a plumb bob. Put the base on a 90 degree "X"- the centerline of the tower will be where the X-lines cross. Plumb bob hangs from the top- centered between the legs. If the plum bob is on the center of the bottom X, you're vertical (assuming your surface is level). The other way is making a measurement tool- a vertical upright, with a horizontal piece at the top (near the top of the tower). Put the upright against (the bottom point of one base leg, with the horizontal piece pointing in toward the center. The length of that top horizontal piece should be how far in from the position of the bottom end of the base leg the chimney leg above it ought to be. Move it around from leg to leg until you have the chimney vertical. In both cases, when you see it's leaning one way, you sand/file the bottom of leg(s) until you get it vertical. Then you glue the chimney onto the base.Vizard007 wrote:Hey guys! I was wondering, how are you guys are making the chimney of the tower? How do you make it straight? Because, usually our chimney is "slanted." And I believe that's what's causing it to break immaturely. Do you guys have a solution to this? Any help would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks guys!