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#1
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Ytter wrote:
Buy or scrounge a bunch of cheap "doorskin" and a hot glue gun. Cut doorskin into strips, use scissors to cut doorskin to fit the odd shapes and spaces, glue strips together in place and you have a perfect template. Rick |
#2
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![]() "Rick" wrote in message ink.net... Ytter wrote: Buy or scrounge a bunch of cheap "doorskin" and a hot glue gun. Cut doorskin into strips, use scissors to cut doorskin to fit the odd shapes and spaces, glue strips together in place and you have a perfect template. Rick Thats the method I saw used at the Govan shipyards in Glasgow, many years ago. They would use that thin wood, that you used to see orange boxes made off. The strips were nailed together rather than hot glue, and braces were used to support the bigger templates. It was some sight to see two big Glaswegian shipyard workers manoeuvering a flimsy 15 -20 ft long template down a gangway on their way to the cutting shop. regards garry |
#3
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garry crothers wrote:
Thats the method I saw used at the Govan shipyards in Glasgow, many years ago. It works a charm ... the beauty is that you can use scissors to trim small pieces to fit perfectly, glue them exactly in place and, like you said, brace the larger sections for dimensional stability and still be able to bend them a bit to get in and out of tricky areas. I like it because you can work small sections at a time and still create a large but perfect template. Rick |
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