Abs/Styrene sheet thickness

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vlester
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Abs/Styrene sheet thickness

Post by vlester »

I've been looking at the plastruct site and I'm thinking about ordering a few sheets in various thicknesses but I wasn't sure what everything meant..

when it says a thickness of .010 or .4 etc I know more is thicker, but is that .4 millimeters or what?

I know this is a very broad question but is there a standard thickness that some of you use for ship hulls?

Thanks for any help.

Vance
kenlilly106
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Post by kenlilly106 »

Thicknesses are in inches unless noted otherwise.

.010 is pretty thin stuff, think a couple of sheets of construction paper, for a reference standard copy paper is .03-.04 thick.

.040 is about as thick as a US Penny.

For hull plating, you'll need it thin enough to take the curve/shape, but thick enough to hold it's shape without warping. .040 is pretty stiff, it can be cold bent 'a little', but in reality takes heat to bend it. .010-.020 can be bent fairly easy.

Ken
vlester
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Post by vlester »

Forgive the continued stupid questions but this one is more...advice related.

Plastruct requires a $20 minimum purchase no biggie there.

I've never used this stuff before so I wanted to try different thicknesses and materials.

I'm looking at ordering 2 .04, a pack of .02 and .01 styrene and a couple of .02 ABS sheets.

Do you think that would be a good bit to start out messing around with?
vlester
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Post by vlester »

Woohoo my first double post!
kenlilly106
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Post by kenlilly106 »

Sounds like a good assortment to try things on, you might want to add some more .040 to the mix, it makes great bulkheads and frames.

Ken
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Johnnycrash
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Post by Johnnycrash »

Save some money...

Grab the yellow pages, and look under Plastic. There should be some listed. They will more than likely be selling sheet plastic. I can get a 4' x 8' (that is feet) of 020 (0.020") for $15 with tax. That's 4,608 square inches of plastic.

And many shops have scrap bins. And some of them will be willing to sell you a bucket full for $10 or so. In there you could get a variety of thicknesses.

BTW, a sheet of paper is 0.003", not 0.03". Or you could say 003. The decimal is implied. Most plastic injected kits are about 050-060 thick (0.060")

Recommended to stcok: 005, 010, 015, 020, 030, 040, 060, 080
John Fleming
I know that's not what the instructions say, but the kit's wrong anyway.
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Arklan
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Post by Arklan »

i have a big stack of .020 and another of .040 that i use for basically everything i build. the 40 for strutctural stuff, the 20 for curvy stuff.
I don't make the rules. I just poke holes in them for my own benefit. - Arklan Uth Oslin

You know it's been a long day when you start singing parodies of Ricard Wagner operas. Kill the Red team, kill the Red Team... - Arklan Uth Oslin
vlester
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Post by vlester »

Arklan wrote:i have a big stack of .020 and another of .040 that i use for basically everything i build. the 40 for strutctural stuff, the 20 for curvy stuff.
So for something like...scratchbuilding the various raised parts on a star destroyer, you would 20 for that?
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Arklan
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Post by Arklan »

well, a star destoryer specifcally is made primarily of varius flat surfaces with alot of little bits for detail. i generally use .020 when building a planes fuselage, say, or the hull of a boat. things like that. if the shape can easily be made from flat panels, i use .040, becuase of it's strength.

cours,e i am by no means a pro at this stuff. just a hobby for me.
I don't make the rules. I just poke holes in them for my own benefit. - Arklan Uth Oslin

You know it's been a long day when you start singing parodies of Ricard Wagner operas. Kill the Red team, kill the Red Team... - Arklan Uth Oslin
vlester
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Post by vlester »

Well I still appreciate the info :D

Thanks everyone
DX-SFX
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Post by DX-SFX »

.040" or forty thou is 1mm or so close as makes no odds.

.060 is 1.5mm which is as good as 1/16th"

therefore 0.8mm is 1/32nd" and 0.4mm is 1/64th".
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