Monday, April 13, 2015
"Tears of joy over new peninsula backdrop..."
Since I had good fortune using the .040 styrene in my corners, I considered that, while also realizing that I then wouldn't be ripping more dusty hardboard, countersinking screws, spackling and sanding. The added cost was worth it. Sold!
The trick now was designing a mounting system for this broad expanse that I would most likely be mounting myself.
The vertical supports for the backdrop capitalize on the grid ceiling system using those clips screwed into T-nuts drilled into the end of 1" x 2"s. |
At this point I already knew that this peninsula backdrop was going to be preferred to my earlier one. Thank goodness! I was happy to live with the loss of real estate. |
The end caps provided runners or channels for the 24" x 96" sheets to slide into and made the job relatively easy for a single installer. |
Looking from inside the backdrop, the sheets are mated to one another by a 2" wide gluing surface and the tops and bottoms are stabilized further with scrap styrene wedged into the end cap channels. |
The seams in the styrene sheets were lightly spackled and sanded, primed and painted. They are impossible to detect. I am over the moon with this outcome. |
Veteran modelers surely already know this, but this is one of those mistakes that rookies sometimes need to make in order to really grow and improve. Duly noted. Lesson learned. Now it's time to move on to my next rookie mistake. What could it be?
But first it's time to catch my breath. Posts for the first two weeks have come daily. Now we'll move to every-other-day for the rest of the month. We'll see you Wednesday for some 'ambience.'
-30-
BONUS: RHETORICAL QUESTION OF THE DAY...
True or false? The author's wife has suggested that the inside of the peninsula teardrop might be an ideal location for her husband's 'time out' when she deems it necessary.?
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Construction
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