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Pink or Blue foam?

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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, September 6, 2005 10:54 AM
California has outlawed this due to cancer or some animal or something.
As for not using it for train layouts, I wonder if that will cause a lawsuit?
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, September 6, 2005 10:33 AM
Our entire club layout is covered with the pink foam board and our mountain range was built up with the stuff. I seriously doubt that it is that great a hazzard. Btw, I'm in central Florida which has lots of the stuff available in the local home improvement stores.

Bob DeWoody
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Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, September 6, 2005 10:21 AM
Does any store sell this stuff online for shipping? If woodland scenery can, why can't others?
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, September 1, 2005 1:55 PM
Tom:
Ask the staff at the Burbank store who they are selling to, 4 pallets at a time. If somebody is building homes with it and are near you, talk to the carpenters or site foreman. I've had great success scrounging through (yeah, I know...) their dumpster boxes for throw-away pieces, with their permission. I've got some as big a 3'x3' which they threw out as scrap. That's a lot of foam board for an HO layout. And the price is definitely right!
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 31, 2005 1:31 PM
I'd greatly appreciate the name of the store in San Rafael that sells extruded foam insulation and Homasote, the one at the end of Anderson. I'm about to start building my dream system, and it sure would help!
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Posted by Rotorranch on Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:43 AM
QUOTE: Originally posted by dthurman

QUOTE: Originally posted by Rotorranch

I like the blue stuff....it's prettier than the pink stuff! [;)][:p][:)][:D]

BTW...I've picked up several pieces off the side of the raod...I guess it blew off a truck. ( OK...so I'm a scavenger....I also pick up sod for my yard off the road, and most of it lived! ) [:D]

Rotor



You used real sod for the freight yard? [:p]


And it takes forever to mow it with my HO scale Snapper lawnmower! ( At least it's a riding mower! ) [;)][:)][:D]

At least the cost of gas is only !/87(1/87.1) the cost of real gas![:0]

Rotor

 Jake: How often does the train go by? Elwood: So often you won't even notice ...

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Posted by edkowal on Friday, August 26, 2005 12:33 AM
The reason that Dow Corning doesn't want you to use it in other than encapsulated form is indeed flammability. As someone else demonstrated, the foam will burn if kept in contact with a flame. Since we frequently use wood as a structural member, the chances of the styrofoam burning in a fire in your layout room are excellent. And remember that interior temperatures in a house fire become extremely high very rapidly. So the foam is likely to keep burning. The other problem is that the material produces toxic gases, and intense sooty smoke when it does burn. Visibility will be nonexistent almost immediately. Both the intense smoke and the toxicity result in a nightmare for the firefighters who arrive on the scene, and for you, if you are anywhere near that room.

If encapsulated in plaster, or wallboard, or similar flame retardant materials, it is much less likely to burn. If it takes some time for it to ignite, the idea is that the occupants will be able to escape without harm, and the firefighters may be able to put out the fire before the styrofoam catches fire.

It is probably a very good idea for folks using styrofoam for scenery to coat it both top and bottom with plaster, or some other non-flammable material for that reason. Painting it will NOT do anything. Paints shrivel up and can burn in a fire.

The caveat about sanding or carving relates to the possibility of a dust explosion if large amounts of airborne styrofoam dust comes in contact with a flame or spark.

This doesn't necessarily mean we shouldn't use it as a material. But we should be aware of the material's properties. Additional information can be found by doing an internet search using the terms styrofoam and flammability.

-Ed

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:59 AM
I guess that's for alien model railroaders. LOL

QUOTE: Originally posted by dthurman

QUOTE: Originally posted by GearDrivenSteam

Pink or blue? I reckon that depends on whether you're a little boy model railroader or a little girl model railroader. LOL


Whew! Good thing I got blue [:)]

What about those that buy the green foam, which I have seen at Home Depot.
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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, August 25, 2005 10:52 AM
From the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Architecture website "...You fear pink foam, but know that blue foam is better..." :) (http://archweb.unl.edu/Survival/if.php)
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Posted by fwright on Thursday, August 25, 2005 4:42 AM
On30francisco and other NorCal dwellers

A building supplies and lumber store on south end of Anderson Drive in San Rafael - not Home Depot or OSH! - had both the foam and Homasote last I checked in April. Getting ready to buy some of each myself, will probably be in October, looking at my travel schedule. Will post if it's still there.

I'm having to bite my tongue about making snide remarks as to who their market is for the stuff given our incessant battles over real estate and construction in People's Republic of Marin. Glad I have model reailroading to make my mind off that stuff!
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Posted by selector on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 11:11 PM
Tom, it would almost be worth a trip up-state and into Washington to get a few sheets for the next go-around, wouldn't it? Camping trip, business (write-off?),whatever.
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Posted by twhite on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 10:45 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by GearDrivenSteam

Pink or blue? I reckon that depends on whether you're a little boy model railroader or a little girl model railroader. LOL


Reminds me of my smart-a## neighbor (who I really like, BTW) when I was building my layout with the Corning pink stuff. He grinned and asked me if I 'special ordered' that particular color. After I put the WS risers on it, he would come over and ask me how the Strawberry Sundae was progressing.
By the way, there's NO way you're going to end up with 'dust' when you're carving extruded foam. You'd have to use an electric sander on it to get any dust, and the chances are that the friction from the sander would melt the stuff, anyway. Why we can't get it here in Northern California is beyond me--all we can get any more is the beaded stuff, and although I've had to use it, it's really crap!
Tom [:(!]
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 10:17 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by GearDrivenSteam

Pink or blue? I reckon that depends on whether you're a little boy model railroader or a little girl model railroader. LOL


Whew! Good thing I got blue [:)]

What about those that buy the green foam, which I have seen at Home Depot.
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:52 PM
Pink or blue? I reckon that depends on whether you're a little boy model railroader or a little girl model railroader. LOL
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 9:47 PM
Rotoranch: I also picked up about a dozen sheets of the blue dow stuff out of our alfalfa field, it had to be gotten out of the way, and what better way to get rid of it? The biggest problem was that it was 1/4 inch thick, so it took a lot of it to go a little way.
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Posted by grayfox1119 on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 8:39 PM
I wi***here was an inexpensive way to ship you guys some, the Home Depot (HD) near us has plenty of 2" thick, 2' X 8' pink (ugh) foam insulation. Sometimes they have blue, but the Pink Panther gets mad.
Dick If you do what you always did, you'll get what you always got!! Learn from the mistakes of others, trust me........you can't live long enough to make all the mistakes yourself, I tried !! Picture album at :http://www.railimages.com/gallery/dickjubinville Picture album at:http://community.webshots.com/user/dickj19 local weather www.weatherlink.com/user/grayfox1119
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Posted by Anonymous on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 6:40 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Rotorranch

I like the blue stuff....it's prettier than the pink stuff! [;)][:p][:)][:D]

BTW...I've picked up several pieces off the side of the raod...I guess it blew off a truck. ( OK...so I'm a scavenger....I also pick up sod for my yard off the road, and most of it lived! ) [:D]

Rotor



You used real sod for the freight yard? [:p]
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Posted by on30francisco on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 6:05 PM
Tomman, I know what you mean when you say you can't find the foam in your area. I am having a difficult time locating a store that sells it in the San Francisco Bay Area. I will probably have to use the old tried-and-true methods of plywood benchwork and hardshell scenery due to the lack of stores that sell foam. If anyone knows a store that sells foam in the Bay Area, please let me know.
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 15, 2005 3:49 PM
Reading this thread jogged my memory. When I fixed up my basement I put the foam board against the concrete block walls and put paneling over that. I remember reading a pamphlet at the store (one of the big-box home supply stores) about use of the foam board. It recommended that it be covered with a nonflammable material (plaster board was used as an example). I suppose maybe some areas made this recommendation part of their building codes, which might be why it's not sold in some areas (??).

Anyway I decided to check its flammability. Not more than ten minutes ago, I tried to burn a piece of it outside in my back yard. I used a standard propane torch and a piece of Owen's pink foam. As long as the propane flame was in contact wioth the foam, the foam burned with a yellow flame that produced heavy, sooty, black smoke. After taking the propane flame away from the foam, the yellow flame self-extinguished itself in less than two seconds. I would assume that breathing the heavy black smoke would not be very healthy. I then tried this same experiment on a piece of white bead board. Pretty much the same thing happened - heavy black smoke - but this time it took about ten seconds for the flame to self-extinguish. I didn't have any blue foam to try.
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Posted by Rotorranch on Monday, August 15, 2005 2:41 PM
I like the blue stuff....it's prettier than the pink stuff! [;)][:p][:)][:D]

BTW...I've picked up several pieces off the side of the raod...I guess it blew off a truck. ( OK...so I'm a scavenger....I also pick up sod for my yard off the road, and most of it lived! ) [:D]

Rotor

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Posted by DSchmitt on Monday, August 15, 2005 2:35 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Allan Miller

I imagine that "warning" is just to protect themselves in this overly sue-happy society we live in. If the stuff really was all that dangerous, you can be darn sure there would be warnings printed all over the product itself.



I am sure you are correct, but users should be aware that it is intended to be encapsulated. It does not burn, but high heat (flame or soldering iron for instance) causes it to evaporate. I am sure the gas is not healthy. The evaporation stops quickly when the heat source is removed or the material has evaporated to a point far enough away from the source.

Use water based paints and glues. The material will desolve because of the solvents in many paints and glues. I have used solvent s to quickly create depressions in it for streams and ponds, but this can be hard to control.

I tried to sell my two cents worth, but no one would give me a plug nickel for it.

I don't have a leg to stand on.

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, August 14, 2005 7:36 PM
see if you can find a cameron ashely warehouse, that's their specialty.
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Sunday, August 14, 2005 7:21 PM
I can understand why they would warn against it's use if it was being sanded, but carving it into particles that are not an inhalation hazard doesn't strike me as being particularly dangerous. The fact that they put a plastic film over the sheet, does make me wonder if there isn't some potential chemical exposure issues. The stuff doesn't have any obvious odor, to indicate out gassing.

I agree, it may just be a general CYA warning, not specific.
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Posted by selector on Sunday, August 14, 2005 4:42 PM
Yeah, I think it is safe. I can't be chemical or else it would be as unsuitable as asbestos, and be just as prohibited in construction. I can see the fire issue, but if your house is on fire, dangers from the foam are likely to be moot; either way, yer gonna grab yer trains first and then run like hell. The wife and kids? Let them grab their own stuff!!! [:o)][:D]
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Posted by eridani on Sunday, August 14, 2005 2:52 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by selector

I have a hard time seeing why the extruded foam should be unsuitable for modeling, unless there is something about the chemicals added to Owen's stuff that makes it volatile and injurious over time. Besides, most of us paint over its surfaces with latex paint, so that acts as an enclosure....of sorts.


The problem appears that exposed extruded foam is considered a fire hazard, I found a reference to that from a dealer here in Toronto who linked to an Ont govt website on foam regulations which also say it must be sealed inside dry wall or whatever.

Now the question is [:)] when the foam is covered with hydrocal or sculptamold etc is it sealed just as if it was behind drywall?

Robin Rowland Author and Photographer Kitimat, BC,  Canada

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, August 14, 2005 2:15 PM
I imagine that "warning" is just to protect themselves in this overly sue-happy society we live in. If the stuff really was all that dangerous, you can be darn sure there would be warnings printed all over the product itself.

Obviously, the foam creates dust when you carve or cut it with a knife or other such tool, and you need to avoid breating in those fine particles. I wear a respirator if I'm doing any serious carving to Extruded Polystyrene, and generally use a "hot knife" to do any detail work (which produces some fumes, but no dust).

Folks have been using this stuff for years--myself included--and I've yet to hear of anyone suffering any significant harm. The carved foam gets covered by a coat of paint or plaster in nearly all cases, or, in the way I use it, gets covered by a layer of Sculptamold. Besides, you can't live forever, and we all know by now that virtually everything we touch or consume these days is bad for us in one way or another. Just listen to or watch any daily news program and you'll find the latest items added to the list.

Regarding availability: Depends on what part of the country you live in. Those in warmer climates may have a hard time finding the stuff since it's sold as an insulating material. Those in colder climates (or more seasonal climates) will generally find it at most any well-stocked home supply store. I had no problem finding the stuff when I lived in the Milwaukee area. Have had a more difficult time finding it here in Virginia, although my local Home Depot began carrying it about a year or so ago.
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Posted by loathar on Sunday, August 14, 2005 1:52 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by selector

I have a hard time seeing why the extruded foam should be unsuitable for modeling, unless there is something about the chemicals added to Owen's stuff that makes it volatile and injurious over time. Besides, most of us paint over its surfaces with latex paint, so that acts as an enclosure....of sorts.

I don't know why they said that. the only thing I can think is the dust from sanding and carving. I was going to use it, but now after that, I'm going to stick to wood and plaster.
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Posted by selector on Sunday, August 14, 2005 1:37 PM
I have a hard time seeing why the extruded foam should be unsuitable for modeling, unless there is something about the chemicals added to Owen's stuff that makes it volatile and injurious over time. Besides, most of us paint over its surfaces with latex paint, so that acts as an enclosure....of sorts.
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Sunday, August 14, 2005 12:38 PM
http://www.trains.com/community/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=41485

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