We use cookies to personalize content, interact with our analytics companies, advertising networks and cooperatives, and demographic companies, provide social media features, and to analyze our traffic. Our social media, advertising and analytics partners may combine it with other information that you’ve provided to them or that they’ve collected from your use of their services. Learn more.
Cutting it down has been the most difficult part of it. Use blades with fine teeth. Course toothed cutting tools will leave a rough cut and blow PVC pieces everywhere ( not that I would know ).
I just made a simple 18 inch spinning wheel for winning-a-prize kind of thing. It was for a craft show. I would post a picture but honestly, I really want to do it over again. It looks nice enough but it was my first try and I haven’t had time to fix some of the issues I had in my Easel file.
The material seems to machine well with pretty much every bit I have and it’s relatively rigid. There’s also a good selection of paints, primers and glues available for PVC at your average hardware store too so you shouldn’t have a problem with that. I hope it works out.
Well our Lowes doesn’t carry but thankfully Home Depot does $60 a sheet ALOT cheaper than the HDU material , Did you glue any of it together if so what did you use? and assuming you painted it what paint did you use? This is listed as PVC board so curious if you did anything different than what Plane Crazy did with the HDU material he used Rustoleum which is my preferred rattle can paint, I don’t like the Krylon paint at all.
I’m glad to hear you found it. Even the workers at my store weren’t aware of it when I asked. They had to look up the part number to find it. LOL.
My project ended up not requiring glue but I had planned on using the normal pvc bonding products made for pvc pipes. My understanding is that it actually chemically “melts” an outer layer of pvc so that the partner piece’s melted layer intermix when fitted and they become one piece after it cures. That being my understanding, I felt like those products would create the strongest bond. I’m sorry I can’t offer more than my thoughts on that. I never actually did a glue test.
My wife ended up painting and I think she used acrylics but we were in a rush at the time and just used what we had. If I were to do it again I would find a primer suitable for pvc before any final coats but what we used worked.
I’m curious how it will hold up to UV light outdoors. That has always been a problem for me on outdoor signs, especially black as it tends to chalk up.
Just ordered a 1" thick 4x8 sheet and 3/4 thick 4x8 sheet of HDU, both 15lb density. Wasn’t cheap by any means, but you get what you pay for and when you are putting a product out that potentially hundreds of people daily(at least in my case) will see, why wouldn’t you want the best product and your best work shown? Its going to be an outdoor sign for a local business in a downtown area that is busy. I’ll have quite a bit left over for other orders, or FINALLY carving out my own logo to hang on the wall over my CNC. Luckily I found a supplier a little over an hour from me so I can go pick it up. You can call the people at Coastal Enterprises and they will give you info on any distributors near you like they did me. Super nice people. They will also send you free small sample to experiment with on painting and carving, and their website has a TON of information on working with it.
I just went last night and got a 7.24 W board of this to mess around with. It’s got wood grain texture on one side and smooth on the other. Machines well and would have bought the 4x8 sheet but they were out.