PlastiDip And Temperature

Kinja'd!!! "Birddog" (maintmgt)
10/17/2015 at 19:41 • Filed to: None

Kinja'd!!!3 Kinja'd!!! 7

Rather than “paint” the plastics on the Tri Z I’ve decided to go full PlastiDip. Turns out this stuff is more sensitive to temperature than normal paints.

No before pic but here’s an after of the left radiator shroud once I got it right.

Kinja'd!!!

Oddly, it’s not ambient temp or the temp of the part. It’s the Temperature of the Spray Can!

I wasn’t getting the texture I wanted no matter what I did. Turn the heat in the shed up? Nope.. Heat the part directly? Nope..

So I heated the Can up under a shop light. Suddenly everything was laying out almost perfectly!


DISCUSSION (7)


Kinja'd!!! Nisman > Birddog
10/17/2015 at 19:45

Kinja'd!!!1

Yup. When I dipped my wheels on my last car I put the cans in really hot water for a few minutes.


Kinja'd!!! Birddog > Nisman
10/17/2015 at 19:59

Kinja'd!!!0

That is weird. I want to try shooting it from a gun now to see if there’s a difference.


Kinja'd!!! Brickman > Birddog
10/17/2015 at 20:05

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Life tip: Always heat up the paint can. (hot water and a hot towel for long spray jobs) The molecules are farther apart and spray better :)

Learned that when painting my RC panels. Kept getting splaters and runs, but warm cans worked perfect.


Kinja'd!!! Nisman > Birddog
10/17/2015 at 20:54

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I’m sure. Spray cans aren’t that great.


Kinja'd!!! DarrenMR > Birddog
10/18/2015 at 16:50

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...Doesnt the can say to leave it in the sun for a couple minutes before you use it? I always do that... I thought it said so on the can but I may be wrong.


Kinja'd!!! Birddog > DarrenMR
10/18/2015 at 16:52

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Directions?


Kinja'd!!! DarrenMR > Birddog
10/18/2015 at 17:02

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I never used that word so you have no excuse.