I thought I would add some height to my layout this year. I have garage door insulation foam that I used as a base for my Christmas village in the past. I sold all of that off, so I thought I'd repurpose the foam into a mountain. If you stack the foam four levels high it's almost the same height as a plarail riser. Here's a picture of the work so far. I'll add more pictures as I progress. Eventually I'll do other mountains with multiple levels of trains and a tunnel but I'm going to start out simple with this one.
Foam Mountains
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I am going to be very interested in this Bob as I have been wanting to do this for quite a while. What did you use the carve the details on the sides?
Ahhh....I have seen those by that manufacturer. Did it come with other attachments?
Here is the top of the mountain. I'm not sure if ill carve the top or leave it flat and add a few houses or other scenery items.
(This post was last modified: 05-29-2023, 03:35 PM by Engineer Bob.)
(05-29-2023, 02:47 PM)Super Wrote: Ahhh....I have seen those by that manufacturer. Did it come with other attachments? No, I just bought the individual item with a power supply. Later I bought a straight knife which connects into the same power supply. It was a cheaper way to go.
Yes, I've done a few pieces before. The foam knife makes it easy. EPS foam is more sturdy and smoother but the styrofoam is okay too, and I've had it laying around. I figures I needed to do something with it or get rid of it. The basement is full of too many things. I like foam cutter you are looking at. I've considered getting a table model at some point.
What I like about the table top unit is to cut pieces of foam to fit in particular spaces like foam blocks for storing these trains and for pieces for packaging delicate items or padding things in toolboxes or drawers.
Yes, that is a great idea. I like because you can make very straight cuts with it. Since the base of my mountain is two pieces I have to do some trimming to get them to sit closer together so the seam is not as noticeable. A table wire making an exact straight line would be perfect for that.
I clamp a make shift fence to cut the straightest line I can at the measurement I want, just like using a table saw for cuting wood. I would imagine that the more expensive ones have a fence included but this was one of the cheapest I good find on Amazon because I wasn't planning on using it a lot. I also was looking into make stand alone outcroppings and cliffs to be placed around the layout.
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