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I am in the process of rebuilding my layout,& i was curious to know what other forum members thought of this product,i have seen the vidio on how to use this product & it looks good to me,i have used Scenic Express ground covers on my former layout,is fusion fiber worth the extra money?

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That's all I've been using for the past few years and really like it.

 

Well, actually not ALL, I do paint the top first with some earthy colored paint, then mix up a batch of fusion fiber (go to a thrift store and get a 3 or 4 quart pot to mix it in) with water and whatever color acrylic paint you want to mix in with it.

 

I use a wooden spoon to get the lumps on the layout then smooth it down with a putty knife, followed with a small paint roller pressed down lightly.  Then I sprinkle Woodland Scenics ground foam on top and run the paint roller over it again to get it embedded into the fusion fiber.

 

I don't think this is recommended, but after it dries for a bit I take a wide paint brush and dabble a 50/50 mix of Elmers glue and water over everything to make sure it doesn't come up.

 

I recently added a 2x8 angle-shaped piece to my layout and got the basic ground cover in place:

 

 

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Here's what it looked like before with just green paint down:

 

 

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I still have a lot to do and my scenery skills, well I need more practice.

 

If you don't like it after it dries, it comes up easily with a putty knife.

 

That's my way, but Bill and Maria have some videos on their site I think you can go by also.

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Last edited by Bob Delbridge

Good evening

 

I like it, keep it handy all the time. For rock faces and cliffs not so much, but on anything Flat or hilly yes. Use along the right of way to blend in the road bed and make ditches. use along rivers or ponds, make farm fields, dirt roads, in logging areas loggers mess up a lot of ground, construction sites, on ledges of cliffs, filling gaps in scenery. Stumps, boulders, building foundations can recess into it. Takes a while to dry, lot of water to evaporate. No waste just let the unused portion dry out, bring it back with more water. Don't try to store wet or it will look like a biology experiment. The bottom photo only the straight section in front of station as Fusion Fiber the curved section is just plywood with grass texture.

 

Clem k

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Last edited by clem k

Bought a bag after seeing the demo at York some years ago...neat looking product, seemed to work great. Bought a bag or two. When I was ready to do scenery, I followed the directions exactly and every time it turned Barney the Dinosaur purple and I mean PURPLE! That wasn't going to work...I contact the manufacturer multiple times and they went out of their way to help, sent various other paints to try, etc and no matter what, it still turned Purple. Tossed it all in the trash and went back to my sculptamold before going back to the old school carpet scenery. 

I was in the booth next to the gent demonstrating it when he first moved to the Orange Hall. Had lots of free time to watch as he demonstrated the product and allowed folks watching give it a try.After 3 days of demonstrations, he and those who jumped in completed a scene. Seemed Like a nice product, but a bit pricy.

He did point out that it's important to use acrylic paint to maintain water solubility. I didn't see any purple during the demos.

Don

Originally Posted by rail:

I was in the booth next to the gent demonstrating it when he first moved to the Orange Hall. Had lots of free time to watch as he demonstrated the product and allowed folks watching give it a try.After 3 days of demonstrations, he and those who jumped in completed a scene. Seemed Like a nice product, but a bit pricy.

He did point out that it's important to use acrylic paint to maintain water solubility. I didn't see any purple during the demos.

Don

Their directions called for tempura paint at the time, then they changed suddenly to "only use acrylic" paint, then this, then that. Sent me samples to try, different "fiber" etc. No change. The whole thing seemed kind of like a crock to me after a while....

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