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16lb Foam Questions.

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Im hoping the people that have used 16lb foam can help me out with my questions.

Im gonna use an rtv silicone to make a mold from a 6inch two piece wake bait that ive been making from poplar, it takes me a few hours to carve out the shape and detail and want to make them faster. I searched this site already for different types of casting resins and saw two that might work. Ive read alot of people here like to use feather lite and im gonna give it a shot to see if it works out for me, the only concern i have is it might end up a bit heavier than the original wood bait.

The other stuff i saw was the 16lb foam, which i couldnt find much info on. I read that it turns hard as a rock, if thats true will it hold eyes screws?, since im using the pin hinge to join the two pieces.

And the other question, will it have a smooth finish after it cures, good enough to lay some paint on also would d2t, etex, amazing clear cast work well for a clear coat on this foam stuff.

Any tips would help alot.

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I'll chime in here.. F'lite is about 10% heavier than Poplar. It's smooth enough to easily finish. Foam is a giant PITA in terms of castabiity and finishing. The molds must be made from a rigid material, because of expansion. Even with a large gate, I had problems with silicone molds and any weight of foam. And you must use wire form.

F'lte is a great choice with silicone molds.Lots of labor up front, but if you have a good design, it will be worth the effort.

I made some good "turbo mixers" for the F'lite to use wth a cordless drill.

Contact me,and I will give you more info about F'lite. Its good stuff.

Edited by markinorf
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I'm interested in 16lb polyurethane foam but haven't tried it. All said and done, I think it's the only molding material that comes close to the density of balsa - and that property makes it very interesting for bass baits. Suddeth baits used to sell 16lb foam baits and the company was sold to Blademaster Baits a few years ago, who still manufactures them. Suddeth baits were very popular in the SE and they had some unique designs. You could order baits from them to either float or suspend. I repainted a few Suddeths and the foam surface structure made refinishing an issue, which also exists with mold materials requiring microballoons.

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I'm interested in 16lb polyurethane foam but haven't tried it. All said and done, I think it's the only molding material that comes close to the density of balsa - and that property makes it very interesting for bass baits. Suddeth baits used to sell 16lb foam baits and the company was sold to Blademaster Baits a few years ago, who still manufactures them. Suddeth baits were very popular in the SE and they had some unique designs. You could order baits from them to either float or suspend. I repainted a few Suddeths and the foam surface structure made refinishing an issue, which also exists with mold materials requiring microballoons.

I used the 12 and 16lb foams, and it is as light as balsa for sure. Balsa typically found at hobby and RC shops is between 12-14lb/cuft. Very difficult to cast in a small confined space like a lure mold. The curing is so quick that the cells that are formed arent consistent, and can be so large near the gate that I hated trying to get a good sealed substrate to paint. This also added to the my frustration, since I was trying to make topwater and slow sinkers, not cranks, and the overall weight problems cropped up. I cursed this stuff for 3 months and walked. I gleaned as much info on this as I could and made some fine lures, since the action is identical to balsa, but the labor for finishing was twice compared to a handmade balsa plug.

The F'lite is a good alternative since the cells are so small that only errant bubbbles and humidity cause surface problems. I used bloxygen to store the F'lite and casted when the humidity was 50% or less. And it holds screw eyes like they are in hardwood.

Alumilite white and silica baloons were not as strong at the same lure weight.The baloons are very hazardous.

I think Smooth-On uses melamine fillers ( mixed in already). And I could cast as many as 5 2 pc molds at once, before running out of time.

.

I had storage issues with all the products mentioned here. Use it or lose it.

Edited by markinorf
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I read up on it. The viscousity is very hi. The tensile strength is not as good as Flite. The density is about the same. Mite not hold screws very well?? Too thick to work with? The Flite is like melted icecream, and thats hard enough to deal with. I remember looking at the V for Polywood and thinkin its like twice that of Flite.

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Check out www.alumilite.com site.  They have a 10 pound foam, a 20 pound foam, and a new Alumifoam that has the same density as a middle weight cedar wood.

 

If you go to the following: http://www.makelure.com/Lures.cfm you will see a graph that might help you out.  You will see that the 10 pound foam is the same density as balsa, so the 16 pound you are talking about will be a little less dense.

 

The 320 and 610 foams in the graph are self skining in the mold.  You get an excellent finish so you don't need to worry about painting.  The Alumifoam skins very well as well.  Also, the 10 and 20 pound foams expand well enough, and slow enough, that you do not get mold expansion from silicone molds.  Still, the sprue gate, when trimmed, will require sanding and sealing if you want any quality in your finish.  My sample of the Alumifoam is faster expanding, even though not as much, and it cures fast enough that you might get mold expansion.  You must use a pretty large sprue gate to use it.

 

I find the 610 foam to be more then enough to hold hooks, just as well as balsa.  I do not find the 320 to be nearly strong enough.  I have not used the 16 pound foam you are talking about, so I don't know what to say.

 

I hope that this helps some.

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http://www.smooth-on.com/Urethane-Plastic-a/c5_1120_1162/index.html

search around the side tabs and you will find the foam products. Good luck dealing with foam. PITA. F'Lite has oil products that make for adhesion issues. Most resins have this similarity to some degree. Its a big learning curve. But, very strong and viable luremaking materials.

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On 7/28/2012 at 1:09 AM, BobP said:

I'm interested in 16lb polyurethane foam but haven't tried it. All said and done, I think it's the only molding material that comes close to the density of balsa - and that property makes it very interesting for bass baits. Suddeth baits used to sell 16lb foam baits and the company was sold to Blademaster Baits a few years ago, who still manufactures them. Suddeth baits were very popular in the SE and they had some unique designs. You could order baits from them to either float or suspend. I repainted a few Suddeths and the foam surface structure made refinishing an issue, which also exists with mold materials requiring microballoons.

I know this is an old thread, but the Suddeth's were my dad and uncle's. I've now got my own bait business and making the Suddeth Little Earls. Still made from foam just as they were back in the day. Awesome baits that catch fish!! Check us out suddethkustombaitz.com

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On ‎7‎/‎27‎/‎2012 at 3:07 PM, Matador Customs said:

Im hoping the people that have used 16lb foam can help me out with my questions.

Im gonna use an rtv silicone to make a mold from a 6inch two piece wake bait that ive been making from poplar, it takes me a few hours to carve out the shape and detail and want to make them faster. I searched this site already for different types of casting resins and saw two that might work. Ive read alot of people here like to use feather lite and im gonna give it a shot to see if it works out for me, the only concern i have is it might end up a bit heavier than the original wood bait.

The other stuff i saw was the 16lb foam, which i couldnt find much info on. I read that it turns hard as a rock, if thats true will it hold eyes screws?, since im using the pin hinge to join the two pieces.

And the other question, will it have a smooth finish after it cures, good enough to lay some paint on also would d2t, etex, amazing clear cast work well for a clear coat on this foam stuff.

Any tips would help alot.

hi we use smooth on 15lb foam. .mix well in an atmosphere above 72 degrees. .when poured rotate your mold. foams are gassy remember that. we use a good release,wax based in our aluminum molds. ..toachieve a good finish its about your paint process. .yes it holds screws very well. just cover screw threads with a little epoxy and insert. amazing but fickle stuff till you learn the curve. life cycle of open jugs is short. we pour a gallon in 3 days never had issues. watch for the brown resin to go bad . the clear part holds up. moisture is a killer when left in jugs over time..picture below shows a finished body.

12571288_10153346656727397_730489217_n.jpg

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I found the 16 lb polyurethane foams easy to work with to be honest.  Lot less effort than making a wood bait.  Wasn't too difficult and one could flat out knock some baits out after working out the details.   I use a pre-weighted thru wire system and worked inside so no severe temperature issues. 

Made them for several years but they never were as enjoyable to make as wood baits for me.

      

 

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Sorry I did not see this before.

A long time ago, in the late 70's, I was a molding machine mechanic for Tupperware.  They of course are big time plastic injection molding people.  Flashing was a common problem to fix, and there was no one cause or one fix.

The most common cause was a lack of sufficient mold pressure so the plastic would squeeze out and make flashing.  If we could not dial it in, operators would trim it off with razor knifes.  Preferred fix, clamp mold a little or a little tighter.  Fall back fix, got to trim.

Another cause was worn molds causing tiny gaps, or miss-manufactured molds doing the same.  If the molds have always done this, it might help to make another mold.  I believe your molds are new, so I doubt that this is it.

Most of the other causes were due to plastic temperature so that will not help you.

For those of use that mold our lures, using a piece of wood on the two sides of the mold and putting a small clamping pressure will normally do it, stop excessive expansion and stop/reduce flashing.  For foams, increasing mold stiffness (material or by design) and then clamping normally fixes the problem.

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Based on my experiences a typical bass crank can be molded using something like Mold Max 30 (30 durometer) with no issues. 

 The clamps with wood cauls is the trick  (as mentioned above) typically as you can get even clamping pressure.  Once you get it worked out you can do multiple molds at once.   A rubber band also was sufficient for one but was more of a pain to mess with.   Never had any issues with flashing with RTV molds.    I did have issues with flashing on some of the bondo molds I made but that was remedied by slighting increasing the spru diameter and reducing  the initial amount "charged" to the mold.

While I ended up not like making them it was very nice to get consistent product in such a short time.

 

 

Edited by Travis
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