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Removing paint from clear plastic? "Unglue-able" plastic?

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  • Member since
    August 2008
Posted by tankerbuilder on Friday, November 5, 2010 4:11 PM

HI; What your plane is made of is probably a form of cycolac or polybutylene material.This won,t glue well.In fact I don,t know that you can even epoxy it !  I would suggest trying some kind of contact cement. This too could fail . The only other option I know of is heat welding.This is NOT for the weakhearted because if you slip you,ve created a bigger boo-boo.Try this, use silicone adhesive I.E. Silicon caulk in the clear form. this might due the trick.The problem with these types of plastics is there is very few things you or I could get a hold of to glue it as most chemicals are not going to even faze it. It,s strange plastic in that even some acids won,t even etch it. Try the silicone sealer , I believe it will work best.  commodore4

  • Member since
    September 2007
  • From: Truro Nova Scotia, Canada
Posted by SuppressionFire on Wednesday, November 3, 2010 7:43 PM

Scorpiomikey

I use a tooth pick and a tissue once its dry. Then do a dip in future.

Agreed. Keep the end of the toothpick fresh by sanding off any accumulated paint. If the canopy is first treated in Future and allowed to cure it will give a clear layer to protect the plastic clear part. Just work slowly and gently. Masking is great when it works well, frustrating when it doesn't. A pin wash around the canopy frame with acrylic flat black helps hand paint 'inside the lines' & allows a slight margin of error. Try that next time, remember if worst case you can remove the Future with Windex or Isopropyl alcohol & start again.

As for this plastic part... If you are really keen on making it strong the only way would be to drill out the centers of part & mate and CA glue a metal pin to join the part. A lot of trouble, may be better time spent buying the boy another model with the understanding it is not a toy.

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  • Member since
    March 2010
  • From: New Zealand
Posted by Scorpiomikey on Wednesday, November 3, 2010 7:06 PM

I use a tooth pick and a tissue once its dry. Then do a dip in future.

"I am a leaf on the wind, watch how i soar"

Recite the litanies, fire up the Gellar field, a poo storm is coming Hmm 

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  • Member since
    June 2010
Removing paint from clear plastic? "Unglue-able" plastic?
Posted by Johnny .45 on Wednesday, November 3, 2010 6:43 PM

Just curious...is there any way to remove paint from canopy pieces, etc, without scuffing the plastic up and making it look terrible? Say I'm carefully painting the frame lines on a cockpit canopy (which I do by hand, with a brush), and I slip a bit, leaving a little bulge in the line. It's difficult to wipe it off without smearing it around worse, and if you let it dry, you can't scrape it off without ruining the glossy finish.

   Is there any trick to removing that tiny extra bit of paint and leaving a nice straight line? Some powerful solvent that can be very carefully applied to just that tiny area maybe? I'm not getting my hopes up, but I figured I'd ask anyway, since I hate having one little slip mess up a whole canopy, especially when I just spent an hour painting the rest of it all carefully.(Of course, I could just learn how to tape it off...but I've had poor luck with that the couple times I tried it...I'm no expert modeler!)

 

   As a bonus question of sorts, I'm just curious...what kind of plastics resist being glued together? This isn't a model kit I'm talking about (that would be kind of pointless!). It's just that my nephew (of sorts) has a (about 1:48) toy Spitfire Mk II that he got like a year ago...he's like 11, and is getting all into the whole WWII aviation thing, which I encourage. Anyway, he dropped it, and the tailwheel and one of the props broke off. I tried two kinds of superglue and even regular old modeling cement...it just refuses to bond well at all. I even sanded it back to plastic each time before I glued it, so it can't be that. Is this characteristic of a certain type of plastic they use it toys? It's quite a bit harder and brittle than the stuff they make most model kits out of, but I just can't get why it won't bond. I finally got them to stick back on, but it's very fragile now...bump it wrong and they'll come off again. And 11-year-old boys aren't so great about not bumping things! =)

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