Replacement foam for Pelican case
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Replacement foam for Pelican case
Does anyone have a good source for a replacement sheet of Pelican foam or a suitable alternative (like the denser, closed-cell foams)? Everywhere I've looked, a single sheet of replacement foam runs about half the price of a new case! Now that I have an aluminum stock and short barrel, the existing foam cut outs won't work.
You might try Volunteer Foam in Livingston, TN. My Step Son had 3 or 4 inserts made for a Pelican 1750 at $7.00 a peice. The foam is whitish, but it appears to be the same stiffness, etc.
I think they normally make furniture cushions, so this may have been a one time deal, but for the difference in price, it would be worth a phone call.
Jay
I think they normally make furniture cushions, so this may have been a one time deal, but for the difference in price, it would be worth a phone call.
Jay
Cascade Foam
Cascade Foam - much better than what comes in a pelican case. Might have to buy a full sheet but call and ask about scraps or partial sheets.
http://www.toolfoam.com/
Their site shows how to cut it and if you use a different color base foam you get a nice looking cut out.
G
http://www.toolfoam.com/
Their site shows how to cut it and if you use a different color base foam you get a nice looking cut out.
G
I have had great luck with "pick and pluck foam" which allows a high degree of customization without cutting.
I place the object I want to create a cavity for on the foam and then create an outline of the object with toothpicks. THen I remove the item and pluck out the cavity using the toothpicks as my guide. The foam has lasted 6+ years with moderate use.
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/control ... Search&N=0
I place the object I want to create a cavity for on the foam and then create an outline of the object with toothpicks. THen I remove the item and pluck out the cavity using the toothpicks as my guide. The foam has lasted 6+ years with moderate use.
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/control ... Search&N=0
TennJay - I just might have to give them a shot
jhmartin - I used to do just that. My father used to deliver to a local packing supply company back up north, and they had GREAT high density, thick foam that they let me pluck out of the scrap bin at will. Unfortunately, they are no longer in business, and I haven't found anyone local yet.
Sakurama - the problem I have there (along with many others) is that they don't have foam of an adequate thickness, and I'm not a big advocate of gluing layers together.
I have not had the best experience with the pick and pluck foam in large sheets, and prefer a solid sheet that I can cut out. I use the pins with the plastic heads to outline the object, then cut to shape.
jhmartin - I used to do just that. My father used to deliver to a local packing supply company back up north, and they had GREAT high density, thick foam that they let me pluck out of the scrap bin at will. Unfortunately, they are no longer in business, and I haven't found anyone local yet.
Sakurama - the problem I have there (along with many others) is that they don't have foam of an adequate thickness, and I'm not a big advocate of gluing layers together.
I have not had the best experience with the pick and pluck foam in large sheets, and prefer a solid sheet that I can cut out. I use the pins with the plastic heads to outline the object, then cut to shape.
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My preference is to use Polyethylene foam (also sometimes called Ethafoam which is Dow's proprietary name for it). It is a closed cell, solid block foam (normally in white but other colours are available). It is easy (and fun!) to cut with a craft knife of box cutter and quite intricate shapes can be created. It also doesn't trap moisture in the manner that soft foams do, is chemical and oil resistant and is chemically inert itself (which is why it is used by conservators to make custom-made housings and display supports for museum objects, rare books etc). It is often used to package technical equipment and higher end computer gear so I try and grab it whenever the corporation I work for gets a new piece of kit (it's not to be confused with polystyrene which is used to package domestic grade computers etc). It often comes in sheets (about 50mm thick) which can be cut out and sandwiched together to fill up a case.
Try this:
www.thefoamfactory.com
Closed-cell polyethylene foam 1/2" to 2" in thickness available in full, half, or quarter sheets. Well priced according to my research.
www.thefoamfactory.com
Closed-cell polyethylene foam 1/2" to 2" in thickness available in full, half, or quarter sheets. Well priced according to my research.
Thanks for the suggestion, everything I need and pretty solid pricing there on everything from the replacement high-density charcoal foam to closed cell and the pick and pluck for smaller stuff.Guest2 wrote:Try this:
www.thefoamfactory.com
Closed-cell polyethylene foam 1/2" to 2" in thickness available in full, half, or quarter sheets. Well priced according to my research.