Molding and Casting Assignment
Week of March 26, 2014:
This week's assignment is design a 3D mold, machine it, and cast parts from it. My garden and geese could use multiple scarecrows/scarelions as there are fox and coyote in the neighborhood. My plan is to design a stylized lion face, cast it from HydroStone and embed reflectors into the facial features. I will add a mane of Mylar ribbon for more startle effect.
1. I found a lot of lion faces and also cast lions via Google Images but this Dreamstime.com lion was the most inspiring to me.

2. I used Photoshop to create a grayscale image 500dpi and saved it as a png.

3. Then I transformed my 2D image into a height map.


4. Everything changed when I had the blocks of wax in my hands - the size of the block became the limiting factor and my lion face modling and casting project moved to the Shopbot as my composite project. I decided instead to fabricate a nose. Shawn helped me locate a nose.stl on Thingiverse and then we converted the stl to a png.
5. The 90 minute rough cut milling process took six and a half hours to complete. The cable between the Modela and Fab computer was suspect at one point. Several starts and sstops were due to the drill bit or collar rubbing against the side of the mold. A utility knife took care of that. I learned to slide a piece of paper under the drill bit to set the z axis. The smooth milling took another two hours. But at last I had a wax mold.
6. Creating the Smooth-On rubber mold was a far less time consuming step.
7. My error - I let the Smooth-On plastic cure for 2 hours instead of the 15 minutes as directed on the package. More was not better. I thought the rubber/plastic combination did not need a release agent. I had to carve the rubber mold away from the plastic nose with a utility knife and I had to start again with a second rubber mold.
8. At fifteen minutes (package directed time for curing), the plastic was very sticky and still liquid under the surface. At twenty-five minutes, the plastic was solid but still warm, the exothermic curing reaction still occurring. AND the plastic was definitely "stuck" to the rubber. I'm wondering if the reagents have been compromised because they were stored at temperatures cooler than 70 F. Plus the packaging reminds us the shelf life of the materials is short...
9. I'm wondering if the reagents have been compromised because they were stored at temperatures cooler than 70 F. Plus the packaging reminds us the shelf life of the materials is short...

10. Here is the rubber mold, iteration three, with the wax mold a little worse for the wear. The rubber mold has five coats of universal release agent upon it and is far less sticky to the touch.
11. Nose success - universal mold release was the missing ingredients. Curing time was 25 minutes, not the 15 minutes on the package directions.


12. Eventually I will create a classroom set for my students and they will decorate them: some "hot" because the nasal passage warm the air we breathe, some "wet" because of the moistening function, and some like screens or nets or colanders, etc because of the filtering function. Here are the first three noses being worked upon by students.
5/16/14 - Here are the students' noses up close.



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