Which scale do you use ? If 1:16 for example there are original rivets in steel ,and every other sort of metal. Cheap to get from the industrial grocery and not from this modell neck cut offs !
Best regards
Gerd
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Steel can be helpful - you have only to bring it into the "right form "
BTW another good solution are the rivets of Archer Fine Transfers. They consist of black, three dimensional resin rivets on decal film. The ease of appliance is incredible, they are a little pricey however (I'm in no way connected with the producer)
A technique I've used in braille scale is as follows...
Mark up on your styrene sheet or part where you want your rivets. Drill a hole for each rivet using the thinnest drill you can find.
Take thin styrene rod (I think it's 0.25mm and reddish brown). Light a tea candle, and approach the flame with the tip of the rod. It will melt and 'blob'. As soon as it does this, withdraw from the flame - you want the smallest blob, and the longer it stays in, the more rod melts and the bigger the blob.
You now have a sort of 'mushroom' head to the rod. Cut it off with a couple of millimetres of 'tail'.
Insert into pre-drilled hole, and apply liquid cement to the other side of your styrene sheet or part; capillary action will draw the cement in and fasten the rivet.
What a can of worms has been opened!I've got a craft shop just by me,so I'm planning to get some of this paint tomorrow & I'll let you know how it goes.
BTW another good solution are the rivets of Archer Fine Transfers. They consist of black, three dimensional resin rivets on decal film. The ease of appliance is incredible, they are a little pricey however (I'm in no way connected with the producer)
-- Edited by fabe at 17:50, 2008-02-10
A dream come true - especially when I'm going to have to rivet a pair of Mk1 male sponsons at some point in the near future.
Do you have the web address of any UK dealer that sells them?
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