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Love these stories about the carpet monster! Great entertainment and humor! I don't have to read anything else because this forum is so cool. I work in an unfinished old cellar so I have to deal with : The Concrete Creature . And you guys think you have it tough!
Hi :
I save myself the trouble of getting off my chair . I have a high intensity flashlight . When I drop a part and hear it hit the floor , out it comes . 95% recovery rate so far .
Now as far as parts and P.E flying out of the twizzers and going somewhere , this is so true . Found a carefully folded , ready to mount ship's ladder in the cat's food dish .( she prefers dry food ) when It went flying last week .
I wondered why she was seeking attention .She just wanted the durned thing out of her food ! I guess I would too ! LOL.LOL. The idea of clipping all the parts off and throwing them out won't work .The Monster only wants the part you specifically need at that time . None but that ! !
Beware , it will succeed beyond your wildest dreams . Pulled up the carpet in my room and you should've seen the parts I found , intact , in the traffic area ! ! and they were okay . The contractor couldn't figure out why I was so slow pulling up that carpet and not letting his crew do it .
Would you believe the tailight ( left side ) for my 55 Chevy model ? I scrounged another and gave that kit , built , away over two years ago . So now you know . It will getchya ! T.B.
I saw a monster in my carpet. I must have monster carpet?
There.
"All you mugs need to get busy building, and post pics!"
very funny ,
a towel or shop apron workds. doing PE inside big plastic bags can work. moving all the parts as close to each other as possible so limited time in tweezers.
Никто не Забыт (No one is Forgotten)Ничто не Забыто (Nothing is Forgotten)
I once lost a tool (it was a homemade sanding stick) to the carpet monster.
"Whaddya mean 'Who's flying the plane?!' Nobody's flying the plane!"
" />for me , it was a gun port door , I just should be able to see something like this
I bought a 1/72 Dragon SHerman and the first part of the kit went flying somewhere. It was part of the wheel structure. I still haven t found it.. I cant even get to Step #2.. LOL!
I've been known to kiss a fish or two, with a little bit of tongue. Don't judge me.
On the bench: Hasegawa BF109E
In the hanger: 1/48 Tamiya De Havilland Mosquito
In the trash: Revell 1/48 B-25J Mitchell
For years now I have heard the hype about the future micromachining and nanobots. Wouldn't it be great if someone produced nanobots trained to recognize model parts, and would patrol our shop floors? We could set a collection bin on the floor, and the 'bots would collect any model parts they found on the floor and deposit them in the collection bin.
Don Stauffer in Minnesota
keyda
I think the liquid plastic on the tweezer tips would have prevented the slipping. Use a flashlight perpendicular to the floor as the light will cast a shadow and most of the times the parts can be recovered.
Too many models to build, not enough time in a lifetime!!
I lost 2 very small clear bits just yesterday. Since they were clear....and did I mention very small....I didn't even bother looking for them after they sprung, and I mean sprung lose from the reverse action tweezers. I took it as they weren't supposed to make it on to the completed model. Shhh, don't tell anyone, lol.
"Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional"
" A hobby should pass the time - not fill it" -Norman Bates
fox I stopped loosing some of the dropped parts by sticking a long piece of velcro to the underside of the edge of the workbench. My wife sewed the other part of the velcro to the bottom edge of a carpenters apron. When at the bench, I put the apron on and stick the velcro together. It provides a nice soft place for the parts to go instead of on the floor. It has also stopped the dreaded #11 roll into the leg. It won't stop the fly-away PE but every little bit helps. Jim
I stopped loosing some of the dropped parts by sticking a long piece of velcro to the underside of the edge of the workbench. My wife sewed the other part of the velcro to the bottom edge of a carpenters apron. When at the bench, I put the apron on and stick the velcro together. It provides a nice soft place for the parts to go instead of on the floor. It has also stopped the dreaded #11 roll into the leg. It won't stop the fly-away PE but every little bit helps.
Jim
I tried that, but kept forgetting to undo it when I would get up. I finally hemmed another piece of cloth and attached it to spring clips on the bottom of the work surface. But, then I forget to pull it over my lap when I sit down at the bench!
My next attempt will be a foam rubber surface with some extension support so that it will extend out from the front of the bench and will conform to my waist when I sit down. Taking awhile to design it, though.
Gamera Yeah, but will any of that stop the gremlins that keep stealing and hiding my parts??? No, we forget parts also have a mind of their own, unfortunatly.
Yeah, but will any of that stop the gremlins that keep stealing and hiding my parts???
On the Bench: 1/72 Ki-67, 1/48 T-38
1/144 AC-130, 1/72 AV-8A Harrier
Main WIP:
On the Bench: Artesania Latina (aka) Artists in the Latrine 1/75 Bluenose II
I keep hitting "escape", but I'm still here.
"I dream in fire but work in clay." -Arthur Machen
And when I do have to do the hands, knee, optivisor and flashlight I realize how much I hate my dog! Ewwwwww!
I have a vinyl tile floor in my workbench area, and it doesn't help a bit. I think it just enables parts to bounce further after they first hit.
I also find a propensity for parts to bounce in the direction of the bench. The bench pedestals are on casters, and that leaves room for parts to bounce under the pedestals. I need to come up with some combing that will cover the open area at the bottom.
It really is amazing how far small, light parts will bounce. Silly putty and things like that have nothing on parts from a kit on how high and far they will bounce. Even if I see about where they are headed when they fall, they never end up there.
Go to Harbor Freight and get a small can of "Liquid Tape". This product is liquid plastic used to brush on electrical wire connections and to dip tool handles for better grip. Dunk the tweezer tips in the stuff and let it dry. It leaves a thin plastic film on the tips that will prevent parts from flying off. The only bad thing is the carpet monster will not like you any more!
During my last build, I dropped the nose retraction arm of a 1/48 scale Monogram Phantom right in fron of my bench on the tile floor. This is by all means NOT a small part, measuring about 1" in lenght. I gave up on the part after several hours of looking and moving things around. I took the pat off another Phantom in the stash and continued with the build.
Long and behold, 26 days later I see the part on the middle of the room waving at me!!
I had a landing gear get knocked off a plane as I was putting back on the bench, looked everywhere, moved everything even looked in every box that was near (parts have been known to hide in any open box near the bench) A couple of days later after I had emailed the Polish model company for a new I accidentally found it lodged in the cross member of one of the saw horses that hold up my work bench, about 8 inches off the floor. Crazy place to land
John
I still can't believe that peice for the C-17 never showed up. Hubby even helped look for it. The weird thing is it was sitting on the table with the other 3. I took a break, and went outside for a little while. Come back in and one was missing. It should of been easy to find, the inside was painted white. Unless one of my cats pawed it under a piece of furniture.
Not a failsafe, but a help, after losing a few, I put a dark colored towel on the floor and can more easily find dropped parts than when they fell into beige berber carpet.
what get's me is you look for day's for the part , can't find it make a new one , start a new model look on the floor there's the part you lost .aaaahhh!!!
goldhammerHave even considered hanging clear plastic sheeting from floor to ceiling around the work area to narrow down the search grid
I will sometime take an old white sheet and lay it under the bench and chair. This method has saveed me many time while working with PE. It can't help the part that launches from the tweezers though. I still have a part of substancial size off my 1/32 Mustang which to date has never shown up
Steve
Building a kit from your stash is like cutting a head off a Hydra, two more take it's place.
http://www.spamodeler.com/forum/
Hey Fermis ;
I thought muself and Humper were the only ones who suffered from Carpet-itis . It's nice to know you do to . It is funny though isn't it . Delicate part , worrisome to replace and it survives in the main traffic pattern in the home for a long time .
Had a machine gun from a King Tiger turret missing for a month . Found it stuck to a baseboard in the hall . Thing is, it was undamaged !
I had that problem and then decided to attached an old bed sheet to the edge of my workbench and drap the other end across my chair when I am in it. It catches everything I drop and when I am not working it just hangs there covering everything i have under the bench.
It doesn't help with the parts the shoot off the end of the tweezers but I put all of the tall jars and bottles at the end of the bench. Being right handed I put most of then on the left side of the bench. This increased the chance that the part will hit the jars and such and bounce back onto the bench.
Doing this I have greatly reduce the amount of time I used to spend on hands and knees looking for parts that escaped my grasp.
Ah, yes. The joys and adventure of a part flying off to eternity, the ensuing search party of you and the language of a 30 year Navy Master Chief. Even the cats quit helping the search with that and go hide. And the absolute joy and relief of finding it before you crush it underfoot and have to try and order a replacement or fabricate your own.
Have even considered hanging clear plastic sheeting from floor to ceiling around the work area to narrow down the search grid, but that turns out to be a no-no......
Anyone who hasn't succombed has not modeled.
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