From Hollow to Solid - Injecting Resin into your 3D Prints / Statues
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- Опубліковано 18 тра 2024
- In today's tutorial I teach you how to add polyurethane resin / PU resin to an existing statue, model, figure, sculpture, 3D print. The benefit is adding weight to a light hollow object for better structural support and overall a heavier feeling 3D print. It's also beneficial for fixing gaps, damage and holes in sculpts. We will be working on Darth Talon 1/4 scale from Star Wars.
You will learn how to inject polyurethane resin, a plastic compound. Drilling and using a syringe for the two part resin into the statue. You will also learn how to mix resin, most commonly used for sculpting and casting. We will discuss and learn which products work best for strength and which products work best for your projects. And finally we will learn about roto casting, a method of rotating liquid resin as it cures.
Tons of projects are in the works and coming up so stay tuned to the channel. Thanks for watching and much love to those who are subscribed and following my art journey!
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Great timing once again!! This is the third time I've been dealing with a statue problem, and within days, you posted a video that helped me resolve the issue. Only difference is I'm using hot glue ( can't afford resin). Thanks for this very helpful video.
No problem, glad to help. Be careful with hot glue..it doesn't stick so well. Bottles of liquid resin can definitely be expensive but if you just need glue, you can find small tubes of JB Weld epoxy glue for around $5.
@@itsallthingsart Thanks for that info. I'll check out the jb weld
That's Darth Talon.
Yep 👍 I had the name mixed up. Thanks
Im not sure if the makers called her "Raven" to avoid trademarks or you confused her with Darth Reavan but that's Darth Talon
You're right.. was I saying Raven? 🙃 I meant Talon. At least it was bird related lol. Thanks 👍
Awesome! Very interesting how you go about fixing the statue. Turned out great!
Thanks.. yeah trying to find a solution is always the challenging part.
Awesome stuff 🙌
Thanks 😎
Why not edding it before glue and paint the satue together?
If you print the statue holloed ot, than you have to have holes in the end print.
This was a repair job for someone on a previously painted statue. The leg broke during shipping. Otherwise yes, definitely any modification work before painting and assembling 👍
Bro I have to ask why you're not loading the syringe by just putting the needed in the bottle and pulling back the plunger, no shame I'm just a little ocd lol
Yeah good question 😁 This was a project from last year but from what I remember I think I was trying not to waste any. Also the liquid is thick so it's easier to push it out of the syringe than it is to suck it up. As for when it was mixed together.. there was no time.. it needed to be poured quickly and shot out quickly before curing. This resin cures within minutes.
Wait wait....this is a 3d printed statue, already painted, there are no holes for the uncured resin to drip out??? So meaning to say, theres uncured resin inside?
It's actually a mass produced resin kit.. although the print run was only 5 statues. But yes it was already painted and during shipping the leg broke and needed to be repaired. This is Polyurethane Resin so it actually cures when mixed together by a chemical heat reaction. Not the same as Resin for 3D printing which is cured by UV. So technically this method applies to any statue that needs filling or maybe just needs the walls thicker. It's called PU Resin or Polyurethane Resin.
2:04 that's not the only visible crack 😏
🙂👍
This isn't how you fix this problem. You need to clean out your prints and cure the hollowed print PROPERLY from the get go, and this won't happen. This video is absolutely stupid.
Not sure what you're referring to. The video explains this was a custom statue already painted that arrived with a hairline crack in the leg. It's not a 3D print/kit. It broke during transit, not from uncured resin so washing and curing has nothing to do with the situation. But thanks for your feedback. 👍 I'm always open to suggestions.