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Paints turning to jelly- WHY OH WHY :o(

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  • Member since
    April 2005
  • From: Piscataway, NJ!
Paints turning to jelly- WHY OH WHY :o(
Posted by wing_nut on Tuesday, December 20, 2005 10:50 PM

I have a paint situation for which I need some help.  Many of my paints are starting to turn to jelly.  All MM enamels, and most not very old.  A few of them are just starting to get little “bumps” in them… little hard"ish" things that will not stir out.  The flat white I just tried to use… almost full…. The pigment was a gelatinous lump at the bottom of the bottle.  I picked the whole thing up with a toothpick.  Couldn’t stir it… it only broke up into little chunks.  I dropped a chunk on the carpet and it didn’t even leave a mark of paint, on my fingers or the carpet.  Not happening to them all but I did notice that all the ones it did happen to… I had put some BB’s in for shaking the paint.  Copper plated ones.  Can that have an affect?

 

As long as I am asking questions… what is the best primer for PE parts?

Marc  

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Flatlander on Tuesday, December 20, 2005 11:43 PM

Sounds like what is happening to me in my old age.

Seriously, your problem does sound like paint senility.  No model paint is stable forever - at some point the pigments, carriers, etc congeal and it begins to look like jello.  In my experience different paints decay in different ways.  Paints seem to vary widely in shelf life.  I have some paint that is fifteen years old and still mixes beautifully.  On the other hand, I went through my paint collection just before a recent move and I bet I threw away 30 bottles Shock [:O]  The majority of it was MM enamel.

The real enemies of paint in my experience are heat, exposure to the air, and evaporation of the solvent.  Usually it is a combination of the three.  The best thing you can do for paint is keep it cool and keep it tightly sealed and unagitated.  I always wipe the rim of the bottle after I open it to remove any paint that might hurt the seal.  I also put stretch wrap over the top and screw the cap over it.  I don't know if this actually helps or if it just makes me feel like I am doing something.

One final tip - always buy the bottle at the hobby shop with the least dust on it.  I suspect some of the paints I have purchased have been on the shelf a LONG time.  It doesn't help of the store gives the paint a 5 year head start on its shelf life.  Also check to see if the lid is tight or if any of the solvent seems to have evaporated.  A surprising number of bottles in the store have fairly loose lids and seem to be a bit down on solvent.  That's a very bad sign.

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