Making your own tunnel portals – the quick and lazy way.
As I needed tunnel portals for my layout, I set out looking for some, but
I couldn’t find any with the required spacing. I did find some Faller stone
portal that I liked, but they were too narrow.
This gave me the change to do my first ever kit bashing and mould making.
I spent some time doing this (bashing the master into being) but I think the
results were good enough for my needs. I then made a box from plywood to
house the master in. No problem there. I remembered an article I read in
MODEL RAILROADER about making moulds using, among others, silicone. Of
course I jumped right in and filled the box with silicone. I forgot to use
something important and the reason I needed it became apparent soon – I
needed to use liquid latex as the silicone stuck to the master. Big time! I
ended up with a broken master with lots of small pieces of silicone stuck to
it. (Tip: the best tool to get these little pieces of silicone off is none
other than an old toothbrush – OK, I admit, I found that out by accident).
So, with my newfound experience and a fixed master, I set out to remake
the mould. This time I made sure I went out and got the MODEL RAILROADER and
had the article next to me while I made it. First the six layers of liquid
latex generously brushed on (use an old brush – its useless afterwards) and
then a couple of layers of silicone (3-5mm thick at a time, otherwise it’ll
never dry – steep learning curve this one). All went well up to a point and
that point was after I took the mould out of the wooden box. The latex came
right off the silicone. I’m no chemist but it appears that the latex and
silicone don’t bond too well. The silicone (flopped) mould flies well if you
throw it across the garage though. So much for that.
At this point I was ready to throw in the towel when a thought struck me:
why not use just latex? I did just that – poured the latex to the brim of
the box. The master stayed whole after the second attempt because I read the
article by now and the latex didn’t stick to the master. A point of warning
here: if you live in a damp and cold environment (I do believe Ireland
qualifies for this – I mean, there’s a reason its so lush and green over
here), it will take forever and a day to harden/dry. Central heating
radiators can assist with the drying process if your 4-year-old son resists
the urge to draw pictures in the slightly gooey drying latex (don’t ask,
www.don’t-go-there.com).
The result: a near perfect stony tunnel portal mould in the size
required. But my woes were not over yet. I now had to cast some portals. Out
with the newly acquired Woodland Scenics hydrocal, into the mould and on its
way to the dustbin. This being my first time tried I tried my hand at
hydrocal, it could just be I didn’t get the mixture right. It seemed too
powdery to me anyway. Down to the craft shop (the only darn shop in town
that’s remotely useful for a train modeller) and back with some casting
powder. Don’t ask me what’s the difference between casting powder and
plaster of Paris – I don’t know nor care. But casting powder works! I think
I have the mixture sorted by now and four nights later I have enough portals
needed for my layout. I’m actually looking for ways to make more tunnels to
justify more portals. The next step will be to stain it.