Making a little plastic cap to keep the air in our small paddling pool
Difficulty Level (Easy, Medium, Hard, Insane):
Easy
Process:
It was July 1st and almost warm enough to put out the little paddling pool for the kids so I hauled out the air pump and got going just to realize that one of the 3 plugs that keeps the air in for the pool wall was missing. I tried a regular pop can cap but it was too big and no other bottle had a cap that was just the right size.
I realized I could probably just go to walmart and buy one for a couple of bucks but where would be the fun in that? So I hauled out the alginate and the two-component urethane casting resin (both from www.smooth-on.com) that I bought a couple of years ago after the Fix that wasn't fiasco.
The first step was to create a negative mold of the bottle cap using the alginate. Then, I had to mix the two components of the rubber and pour it into the cavity. An hour later it was de-mold time, clean up the edges and cap the pool
Pictures:
One of the other caps |
Inside of cap |
I used a piece of silicone gasket (red) to replace one of the missing stoppers |
This is what it should look like |
The rubber stopper that is still missing the screw-on cap |
After I poured the alignate (the cap is at the bottom of the tin can) |
The two urethane components before mixing |
After I poured the urethane into the alginate mold |
Second try as the first try didn't work out |
After I de-molded the cured urethane |
After it was cleaned up. It looks pretty ugly but it works |
After I installed the cap on the pool |
The pool all ready to be filled |
Belt sander
Knife
Screwdriver
Dental pick
Materials:
2 tbsp Alja-Safe Alginate
1/8 cup Smooth-Cast 380
Some tuck tape
Cost:
$0.00
Time:
1hr
Savings:
$2.50
Conclusion:
Works great. The air is holding.
1 comments:
If I were to choose to buy replacements, where would I find one or two? Thank you.
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