This is a fairly well-known stunt, especially since Mark blogged the work of Dominic Wilcox on Boing Boing back in 2004. The methods circulating on the web generally favor the use of an oven to melt the guys together, and while that’s certainly less labor-intensive, it generates a bunch of foul-smelling fumes in your kitchen. The oven method applies indiscriminate heat, which tends to melt the guys pretty severely, and is also, reportedly, fairly sensitive to differences in composition between guys from different manufacturers.
I’ve always wanted to try this, and since it’s plastics month, I thought I’d try to figure out a way to do it outside. This method uses a heat gun to soften the plastic in a more discriminate way, and though it’s more work, it can result in a less-melty look, with more intact guys. Adding a mechanical “mushing” action to the weld also seems to make the process more tolerant of different types of plastic from different batches of guys.
Steps
Step #1: Setup
Next



- Work outdoors. I recommend also using a fan positioned to blow directly across the top of the mold. Some people do this in the kitchen oven, but that seems like a bad idea to me. Melting plastics smell terrible, and the compounds that produce those smells are widely believed to be toxic.
- To make sure you have enough guys, line the inside of your mold with them, without applying any heat. You should be able to fill up the mold and have 5-10 guys left over.
- Dump out the mold, turn on the fan, plug in the heat gun, and you're good to go.






































