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Dioramas
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1/35 sandbags
Recon
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Wisconsin, United States
Joined: October 19, 2002
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Posted: Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - 05:35 AM UTC
What do you guys use to make sandbags and what is the correct size?

Thank you,
Mike
Jberardi
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Georgia, United States
Joined: July 10, 2007
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Posted: Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - 01:03 PM UTC
Milliput or any two part epoxy putty works great for sandbags. In full scale they are about 14 inches wide and about 24-26 inches long. In 1:35 that'd be 0.4 inches wide by 0.75 long.
Graywolf
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HISTORICUS FORMA
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Izmir, Turkey / Türkçe
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Posted: Tuesday, September 18, 2018 - 06:10 PM UTC
This may help.

Making Sandbags

best regards
Engin
Recon
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Posted: Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - 10:26 AM UTC
Thanks for the replies.

Mike
AgentG
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Nevada, United States
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Posted: Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - 07:54 PM UTC
Two part epoxy putty sandbages.




jps
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Posted: Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - 10:04 PM UTC
What I did when making sandbags was I made a "cookie cutter" out of sheet brass to size, I don't recall the dimensions but the other poster's dimensions sound about right. The cookie cutter was round on the top and square on the bottom. I mixed apoxie putty and rolled it out to approximately 1/8 inch thick. After cutting them out and placing them I sculpted them a little in place, To make the portion of the bag that is tied, I made a tube of tissue paper roughly the size of the bag and tied white glued string around it in several spots. After the string dried I cut the tissue into short lengths one side right next to the knot. I then glued these onto the rounded end of the bag as needed using white glue to finalize the final position of the material and string.

I guess not easy to describe but hope you understand what I am saying.

Dave
j76lr
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Posted: Thursday, September 27, 2018 - 06:18 AM UTC

Quoted Text

Two part epoxy putty sandbages.






very nice sandbags !
j76lr
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New Jersey, United States
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Posted: Thursday, September 27, 2018 - 06:20 AM UTC
in Viet nam they were green nylon bags with a weave like pattern to them . (1971-72 )
obg153
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Joined: April 07, 2009
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Posted: Thursday, September 27, 2018 - 06:34 AM UTC
While consulting my books, I came across two other options if you don't want to use epoxy putty. One; use florist's putty. It comes on a roll (like ribbon). Two; Chiclets (if you can still find them). Soak them in very warm water till the candy coating dissolves, rinse with cool water, and they're ready to go. Both can be pressed with cloth for texture and painted. Acrylics are recommended.
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