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Re: [TCML] Brush copper plating onto polystyrene



Good info, although I'd still like to find someone who has done similar
work with one of those inflatable exercise balls.. that would be an awesome
VDG terminal :)

On Fri, Oct 19, 2018, 10:38 AM jimlux <jimlux@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On 10/18/18 10:14 PM, Matthew Sweeney wrote:
> > I would much prefer to find a nice wood or plastic form to use, but
> haven't
> > had much luck finding a source of cheap rings, spheres of various sizes.
> > The polystyrene forms I found are fairly dense and I actually want to
> make
> > these items quite light if possible.
> >
> > Time will tell if it works :)
> >
>
> There have been all sorts of interesting ideas proposed in the past..
> It's hard to find them in the archives, because there's no obvious
> search term..
>
> Here's some ideas:
>
> Spheres are easier
> - cheap globes can be painted or metalized
> - garden gazing balls - they can be hard to drill/cut
> - floats & buoys
> - large glass or plastic carboys
> - spherical pressure tanks of various kinds
>
> Toroids are harder
> - tire inner tubes
>
> There's plenty of discussion about various ways to do papier mache or
> plaster of paris or fiberglass over some form, and then you're faced
> with the problem of a conductive coating.
>
> As Antonio pointed out, for a lot of applications the coating does not
> have to be particularly thick, just smooth & conductive, so spray on
> aluminum paint might work fairly well.  I used to have a can of flat
> black spray paint that clearly used carbon black as the pigment, so it
> was quite conductive.
>
> You can go to a paint store and ask them about mixing a custom batch
> with aluminum powder, and then you'd use a standard air spray gun (e.g.
> Binks gun) to apply it. Ask about "gilding"
>
> you can also do traditional gilding with thin metal sheets - gold is, of
> course, traditional, and makes a very nice smooth mirror surface, if
> applied upon an appropriate substrate that is strong enough to burnish
> the gold.
> (a quick amazon check shows 0.12 square meters (1120 cm2) of gold leaf
> is about $15, so covering a 50 cm sphere would be about $150.)
>
> There's also thin aluminum and silver sheets.
>
> You can also call around to shops that do evaporated metal deposition -
> you can get almost anything covered in a metal film of your choosing -
> how do you think they make those cool mirrored sunglasses, after all. If
> you're not picky about even-ness of coating, it's a lot cheaper - the
> sunglasses folks want just the right thickness and it has to be even.
>
> There are also specialty plating shops that can plate almost anything -
> I've seen all manner of things (including things made of wood) plated -
> think about bronzing baby shoes as an example.
>
> Although, overall, conductive spray paint is probably easiest.
>
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