Pelican case foam layouts and botched jobs

Mr. Z

Belligerent
Full Member
Minuteman
Supporter
  • Feb 20, 2017
    1,494
    3,223
    Wisconsin
    So I spent the money on the 1750. Long story short a pocket knife isn't the best way to make precision cuts. It works fine its just ugly. Anyone else care to show their handywork?
     

    Attachments

    • photo54675.jpg
      photo54675.jpg
      117.5 KB · Views: 61
    • photo54676.jpg
      photo54676.jpg
      114 KB · Views: 58
    Yeah one of those long razor knives that you can break off sections works much better. Yours looks fine though as it appears to be tight enough around rifle which is what you want so no movement. It's about protection and not how it looks.
     
    You use a hot wire to cut foam. It works best and you can cut any shape or curve with ease. I know art stores sell them, not sure how much, but a makeshift one can be made from an old toaster if you know what you are doing (it's just passing current through nichrome wire, which creates tons of resistance and thus a glowing hot wire). This is how they do it at the factory, usually.

    It'd be nice if we could come up with a "club" or whatever where we all pay a small due and those dues are used to purchase tools that we can borrow. A safety deposit paid down when joining the club would prevent theft. Then we'd all have access to oddball tools nobody really wants to buy to use once. Not just a foam cutter, but sight adj. tools, various barrel wrenches and special tools, etc.
     
    You use a hot wire to cut foam. It works best and you can cut any shape or curve with ease. I know art stores sell them, not sure how much, but a makeshift one can be made from an old toaster if you know what you are doing (it's just passing current through nichrome wire, which creates tons of resistance and thus a glowing hot wire). This is how they do it at the factory, usually.

    It'd be nice if we could come up with a "club" or whatever where we all pay a small due and those dues are used to purchase tools that we can borrow. A safety deposit paid down when joining the club would prevent theft. Then we'd all have access to oddball tools nobody really wants to buy to use once. Not just a foam cutter, but sight adj. tools, various barrel wrenches and special tools, etc.

    Thought about ideas like this, not just with gunsmithing and small tools, but like shops spaces you could rent for a couple hours to do whatever, like work on your car. Or have a woodshop setup where you could have access to the specialty tools without dropping all the cash on them. For people who like to do whatever with their own hands, I think it would catch on!

    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk

     
    I have used a turkey carver on my last two pelican cases. Turned out pretty well. A guy I shoot with has a pelican case that looks like it was cut out using a crayon. I'm a function over form kind of guy. As long as the rifle is secure then it works for me.
     
    Thought about ideas like this, not just with gunsmithing and small tools, but like shops spaces you could rent for a couple hours to do whatever, like work on your car. Or have a woodshop setup where you could have access to the specialty tools without dropping all the cash on them. For people who like to do whatever with their own hands, I think it would catch on!

    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk

    For what it's worth, in terms of DIY auto shops, the idea doesn't seem to ever have any success.