Russ, I figured you probably knew about how the "foam grille" would be used, and also that most of the people who contribute to the list would also. I was just trying to clear that up for anyone out there who might have been uninformed about how these things work. On a similar note, there is also a process they used to call "onion skin" at the tech companies I used to contract with. In this method, a vat of resin is used for the CNC work. A laser focuses at a certain depth in the vat, and heats the resin in the shape of the part. This process is repeated layer after layer until a finished resin replica is reproduced. Someone also commented on the CNC process, asking if it meant it had to be done in metal. Strictly speaking, no, it does not. CNC simply means Computer Numerical Control. Any process which uses a coordinate system to produce parts can use the CNC methodology. Some high-tech plastics, and lamination technology like Carbon Fiber and Kevlar also use CNC systems to finish out the part. At one time, I did a contract turning contact lenses on a lathe. I am sure Nick Alfano could clarify further as far as common processes are concerned on one of these grilles, as he is at least current in the machine shop industry. Personally, I think a painted metal grille could be made indistinguishable from plastic in a fairly close inspection. It could also be developed into a reasonably accurate and relatively inexpensive process. mike __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com