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I welcome evidence that there is a process other than dissolving with heptane that is as safe and effective.
What confuses me is the color white it turns . Wax or any clear liquid applied coating should not change white to clear , except for paper , and therefor the coating removal should make the clear only clearer .
Quote from: David K. Smith on December 18, 2012, 10:03:42 AMI welcome evidence that there is a process other than dissolving with heptane that is as safe and effective.As do I.Jason
And in the meantime, I will continue using heptane with confidence (and encourage others to do so without hesitation), because at this point in time I am not aware of a viable alternative.
except for paper
After the oven we put the basket in a ultrasonic bath with oil to remove all wax rests. After the oil bath the product are really greasy, so we put the basket in another ultrasonic cleaner with water to flush all leftover oil away
... Finally, I feel sorry for modelers who are so impatient that they eschew a process known to be effective. To quote Yoda, patience.
The FUD to me seems porous sort of like a paper/plastic/resin combo. I can get water to soak into it. Perhaps the wax/oil is embedded deep into the FUD.
After that, we get the models from the tray and put them in a basket. That basket we place in an oven to melt the wax away. After the oven we put the basket in a ultrasonic bath with oil to remove all wax rests. After the oil bath the product are really greasy, so we put the basket in another ultrasonic cleaner with water to flush all leftover oil away. Then we dab away the leftover water on the models.
Yikes. I get uncomfortable reading this--may explain why some parts arrive broken, some arrive warped, and all have waxy residue. There is strong evidence this process isn't ideal.It does, however, make me want to try heptane in an ultrasonic cleaner... hmmm...
Wax, I don't see no wax: />
I want to try having an item rendered and having no wax removed, and see if that is a better solution.
First, you assume there is only a thin waxy film all over the model. Note the photo I posted above; this is what I see most of the time. I have rarely seen a model with a consistent thin film all over. The dumper is the kind of item that requires days of soaking, since the heptane dissolves the wax slowly. If, however, the part does indeed have only a thin wax film, then the heptane will work perfectly, as it should remove that thin film in just a few minutes; agitation will accelerate the process, too.There are few alternatives that will reliably remove the wax completely. As I have indicated, heat is ineffective, and other methods either risk mechanical damage, or require a secondary cleaning process to remove residues such as oils or detergents. I welcome evidence that there is a process other than dissolving with heptane that is as safe and effective.Finally, I feel sorry for modelers who are so impatient that they eschew a process known to be effective. To quote Yoda, patience.
Agreed. I don't understand why there is a rush to paint/prep when the solution delays the process by only a day or two.
Who said I was in a rush? I would spend hours hand cleaning parts if I could get a better result than Bestine.I don't have the luxury of wondering off whenever I want to go play with chemicals. I can get maybe 3 hours in a day just to myself and I have many other things to spend that time on, preferably golf . If I could could somehow clean parts during the day at the kitchen sink so I could then paint later that night, it saves me a bunch of time.
I built 4 of the Z scale Difco dump cars you're using as an example. Mine didn't have wax everywhere. I ordered maybe 3 months ago, how long ago did you get your example? Mine were clean, but "oily". I dunked them in Naptha for maybe 5 mins, took a toothbrush to it, and let it air dry. I painted the first one the same day.