Thank you my friends, nice to know y'all like it. 
So, latest work...
Marking the diameter of the air vents.
Drilling the holes.
After punching out the leftovers, and filing the holes, the tubing fits well.
Vents in place.
I used short strips of thin PVC for the frame of the vents. Here they are temporarily attached to the vents with tape, and glue.
This white stuff is to fill the blank space between the vents and the frames.
It is called polymorph thermoplastic. You dump it into boiling water, where the pebbles join together into a transparent mass, which is soft and workable for a few minutes. Once dry, it looks like ordinary plastic.
Good thing about it, is you can throw it back into boiling water as many times as you want, and do something else with it!
That's what the assembly looks like before putty and sanding.
End result, with a single coat of paint. Looks shiny, but the pics were taken while the paint was still wet.
Next up, we have a couple of plastic caps from an Easter Kinder chocolate egg... :nuts:
I always knew they'd be useful someplace...
icard
And, some plastic pipe from the leftovers of my daughter's shop plumbing i worked on. (remember the beauty parlour?)
Perfect match in diameter.
Luckily, one edge was already conical, very convenient.
To complete the equation, i cut a bottle neck from a mineral water bottle.
This is what the whole assy looks like, temporarily held together on tape.
And, this is where it's gonna be placed, after getting sealed and sanded and painted. If you haven't figured it out yet, it's the Oxygen bottle...
Stay tuned!
So, latest work...
Marking the diameter of the air vents.
Drilling the holes.
After punching out the leftovers, and filing the holes, the tubing fits well.
Vents in place.
I used short strips of thin PVC for the frame of the vents. Here they are temporarily attached to the vents with tape, and glue.
This white stuff is to fill the blank space between the vents and the frames.
It is called polymorph thermoplastic. You dump it into boiling water, where the pebbles join together into a transparent mass, which is soft and workable for a few minutes. Once dry, it looks like ordinary plastic.
Good thing about it, is you can throw it back into boiling water as many times as you want, and do something else with it!
That's what the assembly looks like before putty and sanding.
End result, with a single coat of paint. Looks shiny, but the pics were taken while the paint was still wet.
Next up, we have a couple of plastic caps from an Easter Kinder chocolate egg... :nuts:
I always knew they'd be useful someplace...
And, some plastic pipe from the leftovers of my daughter's shop plumbing i worked on. (remember the beauty parlour?)
Perfect match in diameter.
Luckily, one edge was already conical, very convenient.
To complete the equation, i cut a bottle neck from a mineral water bottle.
This is what the whole assy looks like, temporarily held together on tape.
And, this is where it's gonna be placed, after getting sealed and sanded and painted. If you haven't figured it out yet, it's the Oxygen bottle...
Stay tuned!

