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Thin cardboard questions

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  • Member since
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Thin cardboard questions
Posted by kasskaboose on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 5:10 PM

I ordrered the cork.  Thanks for everyone's help!! To make the mainline profile a bit higher, I thought to add a thin layer of cardobard underneath the cork.  The cardboard I need is about the same thickness as what's found behind a legal pad of paper.  Where to get such a product?  I figure Michaels of Joann's art store.  The other question I had was what type of glue to secure it to the styrofoam (subroadbed) and the cork (roadbed)?

TIA!

Lee 

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  • From: Winnipeg Canada
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Posted by Blind Bruce on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 5:24 PM

My first thought was that cardboard of any type will absorb moisture and may swell and cause problems. I don't know.

Second thought, use latex caulk and weigh it down until well setup. This may seal it from moisture.

Sorry I cannot be more help,

73

Bruce in the Peg

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Posted by loathar on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 7:28 PM
That card board is called "chip board". Any local print shop or quick printer in your area will carry it. (not a place like Kinkos. A REAL print shop)They can even cut it to width for you to save you the hastle of doing it. It will absorb moisture, but being secured under the roadbed, I don't think it will matter.
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Posted by Autobus Prime on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 8:20 PM
 kasskaboose wrote:

I ordrered the cork.  Thanks for everyone's help!! To make the mainline profile a bit higher, I thought to add a thin layer of cardobard underneath the cork.  The cardboard I need is about the same thickness as what's found behind a legal pad of paper.  Where to get such a product?  I figure Michaels of Joann's art store.  The other question I had was what type of glue to secure it to the styrofoam (subroadbed) and the cork (roadbed)?

Eat more Cheerios.

 Currently president of: a slowly upgrading trainset fleet o'doom.
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Posted by tomikawaTT on Tuesday, July 15, 2008 11:51 PM

I use a rather thinner product, card stock, between styrofoam roadbed (cork doesn't do well in my high heat-low humidity layout space) and flex track.  Grey latex caulk is my adhesive of choice, both card stock to roadbed and flex track to card stock.  My usual ballast is old telephone books, supplemented with full 2-liter soda bottles.

The caulk seems to seal the card stock against moisture, but I don't know if it could withstand a full-scale soaking.  HAVEN'T been there, done that.

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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Posted by hornblower on Wednesday, July 16, 2008 2:57 PM
Check out the drywall department at Lowes or Home Depot.  They have cardboard furring strips used to true up warped studs prior to hanging drywall.  These strips are around 3' long and are 1 1/2" wide.  They are around 1/8" thick which is close to 1 scale foot in HO.

Hornblower

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Posted by HarryHotspur on Saturday, July 19, 2008 3:14 PM
Our local art store (as opposed to craft store) had more different kinds of cardboard than I knew existed.

- Harry

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    September 2007
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Posted by chicochip on Saturday, July 19, 2008 5:23 PM

Years ago, I was in the retail business. We used to buy sheets of cardboard material in various colors to use for advertising signs in the display windows and throughout the store. Believe it or not, the generic name for this stuff was "railroad board!"

chicochip 

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