Members Historicalbeltworks Posted May 21, 2020 Members Report Posted May 21, 2020 Hey guys, I have a question. I did apiece for a customer, and he’s decided he wants like 20 more. It’s a small thing, but I don’t want to retool the same thing 20 times. Any thoughts on reproducing a piece of tooled work, such as making a mold and pressing in my clicker? I’d like to avoid the appearance of just having a stamp made and then pressing them out. It looks a bit to sterile for me. Thanks Quote
Contributing Member fredk Posted May 21, 2020 Contributing Member Report Posted May 21, 2020 I would 1. apply plenty of wax to the tooling 2.build a dam around it using something like blue-tac 3. pour in a moulding silicon rubber 4 . this will give a negative of the tooling but is too soft to use 5. Make a moulding rubber copy of the negative, this should look the same as the original tooling 6. use that second rubber copy to make a resin negative of the tooling. Use polyurethane moulding resin. Make it about 20 to 25 mm thick with some glass-fiber, aka fibreglass, in through the resin Quote
Members Dwight Posted May 21, 2020 Members Report Posted May 21, 2020 I have a couple of "customers" for whom I make key fobs. I sent to China, . . . had brass stamps made . . . they work very well . . . the detail is beautiful . . . and the price was reasonable, even though it took almost 6 weeks to get them. There are folks here in the states who may make you a stamp for a reasonable price. May God bless, Dwight Quote
RockyAussie Posted May 21, 2020 Report Posted May 21, 2020 A little similar to @fredk method but could be a little quicker. I have done this before and it worked very well under clicker press usage for copies going into a few thousand. Seal the leather piece first then when well dry coat will a spray mould release agent then build your box or blu tack wall. Follow by pouring in some high impact casting epoxy to a height of 1/4" to 3/8" height and then put a piece of steel cut about 3/8" thick on top of the epoxy whilst still wet and then let dry 24 hours or more. Only bad thing I found is that it gets a bit hot and is likely to take off your sealer off of the leather master piece. Talc powder may work better than the mould release spray but I cant say for sure. This is the stuff I used https://www.barnes.com.au/rigid/md60-2017#/399-sizes-750g Quote
Contributing Member fredk Posted May 21, 2020 Contributing Member Report Posted May 21, 2020 3 hours ago, RockyAussie said: . . . Only bad thing I found is that it gets a bit hot and is likely to take off your sealer off of the leather master piece. Talc powder may work better than the mould release spray but I cant say for sure. . . Thats the main reason I say to make the rubber negative first. I recently spilt some moulding resin on a well sealed and waxed scrap piece of leather. The resin stuck to the leather like it was part of it. Quote
Members Historicalbeltworks Posted June 17, 2020 Author Members Report Posted June 17, 2020 Thanks for the info guys I got a couple things now I’m gonna try I’ll let you know if it works or if it doesn’t. Quote
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