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Soak the parts and paint them the next night. I don't see where your time is being burdened. Soak them, pull them out, let them air dry which takes minutes, and then airbrush. No manual labor involved prior to painting other than unscrewing the lid of a glass jar and extracting the parts.
You're not going to get a better result than Bestine if you want all of the wax removed.
Looks good on paper, just doesn't jive with how I work.And if my concern was just the removal of the wax, I would use it. I don't think the wax needs to be dissolved in order to have clean model and I'm looking for alternatives. If this happens to go against David's and your prime directive, I'll live. Jason
I skimmed this quickly, but I did not catch any suggestion related to the technique I use to clean my models.Water pick. It's like a sandblaster, but with non-destructive water. The fully cleaned models remain the true color of the material. Here, see for yourself.You can also see the true texture of this process. I know many around these parts consider this texture appalling. But for many of the designs on Shapeways, consider the alternative...Nothing.
Thanks for the picture. This confirms what I have long thought about this discussion- solvents are probably modifying the resin surface material during cleaning. I work with different types of resin in the lab and most of the weird effects come from so-called compatible solvents, including heptane. It is often a polymerization effect due to the presence of the solvent.
Hmm, everyone has called it resin. The references to curing made here suggest a resin rather than a molten plastic like ABS.
OK, so let me get this straight. You get the RP model in the mail, drop it in a jar of Bestine, and close the lid.Next day (or maybe two days later, whatever), you open the jar, remove the model, let it air dry for a little while, then start painting.I don't see the problem. What am I missing?
As for Bryan and my so-called "prime directive," I tend to think you seem to have some unfounded bias against our recommendations; you keep yearning for an alternative, but no one has come up with one, so you rail against us for reasons not entirely understood, even going so far as to claim that soaking the model in a jar for a day or two is somehow inconvenient.
Looks good on paper, just doesn't jive with how I work.And if my concern was just the removal of the wax, I would use it. I don't think the wax needs to be dissolved in order to have clean model and I'm looking for alternatives. If this happens to go against David's and your prime directive, I'll live.
... My basis for not liking Bestine is the frosting and the surface left behind. It's nice to finally have one example showing that you can have a clean model without the frosting. As for the surface, you''d have obvioulsy to compare two models side-by-side to see if there is any difference. And if that technique works, perhaps there are others.
Really? That Batmobile has no intricate details from what I can see, regardless of its size. Take a water pic to the White Tower window treatments or Keyser Valley caboose mold separations and see how they hold up, then get back to me.