April 09, 2011

Pylon progress

So yes, it's been a while, but at long last I've been making progress. The thing with pylons is, they're big. If you want to take them with you, you pretty much have to go flat-packed. Like so:

 
So what I've done is cut the tip of the pylon with a hacksaw, drilled some holes, and glued magnets in (in this case they're 3x2mm, ensuring a nice powerful fit).
 

On the pylon side, I drilled 3 roughly equidistant holes, glued the magnets in, waited for everything to dry, and then added a spot of paint on top of the magnets. I pressed the other part while the paint was wet, which gave me the place to drill…

 … I then drilled where the paint was, put on more magnets (taking care I got the polarity right), and here we are:

 
Here is the result, on one of my older pylons (I've managed a tighter fit this time around):

 

 


 While I was at it, I assembled the centre of the pylon: glued the 3 parts together, then added 1mm brass rod in 4 places. The rod is not flush, the idea is to fill the hole with a bit of green stuff. It was quick to do, and ensures the thing will not break apart. The joint in the middle will be filled with green stuff as well - easier than spending time trying to get the two parts fit exactly.

3 comments:

  1. That's cool great job with the magnets. Do you think I would be able to do the same on my Thunderbolt with the new GW flying base they supplied with it? I only ask as I am a bit stuck on how I can put it on a base but still have the ability to move it around.

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  2. You'd need some seriously big ones I reckon. Ask Stephane @ monstrouscreatures, he's been playing with that kind of stuff for his titans. Failing that, pinning should do the trick.

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  3. Mmmm.. Thanks for the recommendation but not sure on that one. For the Titan I used real thick brass rod but in the case of the Thunderbold that would not be the best. Same problem I have with the Vampire Hunter. Not simple, I agree.

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