Re: GEOHEX Terrain
From: Carlos Lourenco <loscon@g...>
Date: Tue, 28 Feb 2012 22:49:18 -0500
Subject: Re: GEOHEX Terrain
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The sloped curves would be easy to match using a hot knife, (that is, a
good hot knife) shouldn't be that hard at all. The foam itself is cheap
and
easy to work with even if you mess up one or two you eventually the the
hang of it. That's the easy part, matching the flocking colors might
take
some more trial and error w/ the mix.
On Tue, Feb 28, 2012 at 9:02 PM, Evyn MacDude <infojunky@ceecom.net>
wrote:
> textfilter: chose text/plain from a multipart/alternative
>
> On Tue, Feb 28, 2012 at 11:55, Mike Stanczyk <stanczyk@pcisys.net>
wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 28 Feb 2012, Michael Brown wrote:
> >
> > > GeoHex was patented and he let it lapse. I think you can still
get the
> > info
> > > from the US Patent Office. I visited them while they were still
in
> > > production, the key was the jigs they used for cutting. Every
piece
> was
> > > hand cut, it was the fastest and cheapest option (he did look at
> > "casting"
> > > processes with the folks that make packing inserts)
> >
> > I've seen the Patent. Not helpful. ;-)
> >
> > I've always suspected that there was something sneaky/cool going on
> during
> > production. I've always felt that the pieces fit together in some
way
> > for easy production not just cool hills. I just couldn't see how.
>
>
> I have from the gents at Monday Knight Productions that the big secret
was
> the jigs use to make the cuts. Everything beyond that was pretty much
as
> you expect.
> --
> Evyn
>
>