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What a waste. Have any better ideas?

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  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
What a waste. Have any better ideas?
Posted by hkshooter on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 9:47 PM

Tonight, as in many nights lately, I was working on a kit. Needed just a smidge of paint. Not even a smidge really. More like a whisper. I was painting a couple of copper wires I used on my R2800 for tubes and lines that I have no idea what they do. But I thought since they were in the pic, I'd add'em. Two of these wires are only about 1/8th inch long.

So I select my color, pop the top, pick up a cut sprue stir stick and get to stirrin. I pull out the stir stick, slide it against the rim of the jar and toss it. Then it hits me that I just threw away 100 times more paint than I will use on the project. But the stuff has to be mixed!

So now I'm trying to figure out how to get my paint stirred without wasting so much. I could shake but I don't think it's as effective as stirring unless I do it for a while. And shaking gets paint on the inside of the lid which always glues the lid shut, dries and flakes into the paint jar the next time I open it. Delima!

How does everyone else mix paint? Do you like it shaken or stirred?Big Smile [:D]

  • Member since
    April 2003
  • From: Halfway back to where I started
Posted by ckfredrickson on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 10:37 PM
I hear you on that point and have thought the same thing many a time.   What irks me even more is that then the brush is dirty, and you have to pull out the thinner to clean it, so I sometimes skimp/cheat on this point and just use the stirrer (usually a flat toothpick) to apply the paint.

I've also sometimes used unwrapped paperclips to stir paint... they're a little bit harder to hold, but the metal doesn't absorb paint like wood so that less paint is going to the trash, but plastic shouldn't absorb that much paint either.

The ultimate solution, albeit a very expensive one, would be to purchase a magnetic stirrer and a bunch of Teflon-coated stir bars from a scientific supply house like Fisher Science; just drop a stir bar in each jar of paint, give 'er a crank before using, and then leave the bar in there until the jar is empty, at which point the bar could be cleaned and reused.... I've seen bars the size of a grain of rice, but paint would probably require larger bars.  However, seeing that most bars cost more than entire jars of paint, it'd take you decades (or more likely, centuries) of prolific model painting for this solution to break even... you're better off to just keep doing what you're doing.

  • Member since
    February 2003
  • From: Tacoma WA
Posted by gjek on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 10:40 PM
I usally have to stur mine a while, then I shake it once the thick pigments on the bottom get mixed. When I first open a bottle I clean the lid. I then put a piece of seran wrap over the bottle then put the lid back on. Keeps the lid clean.   Greg
Msgt USMC Ret M48, M60A1, M1A1
  • Member since
    January 2003
  • From: Peoples Socialist Democratic Republic of Illinois
Posted by Triarius on Tuesday, April 18, 2006 11:05 PM
Take an eight inch long piece of welding rod, aluminum rod, or brass rod, about 3/32 inch in diameter. Flatten about 1-1/2 inch at one end. File the edges and surfaces flat and square, rounding the two bottom corners. The flat tip helps scrape settled paint off the bottom of the bottle.

After stirring, it is easy to scrape the paint cleanly off on the lip of the jar so you waste less. A dab with a paper towel on the jar rim keeps paint out of the seal. This shape is also much more efficient at mixing than any round stick, and is completely nonabsorbent. I made mine offset slightly (like a meat cleaver) so that I can scrape the sides of the paint bottle.

Ross Martinek A little strangeness, now and then, is a good thing… Wink

  • Member since
    September 2005
Posted by TB6088 on Wednesday, April 19, 2006 12:18 AM

Some time ago I spent $10 on a cordless paint mixer available from micro-mark, and I'll never go back to manual stirring with toothpicks (or whatever) again.  I can thoroughly mix jars of model paint in under 30 seconds, and with the addition of a little thinner, even really old jars of paint can be fully restored to usable condition.  I waste very little paint since, after mixing, I only have to raise the end of the mixer slightly above the surface of the paint in the bottle, turn in on, and the paint is remove by centrifugal force and remains in the bottle.  I dip the end of the mixer in thinner and turn it on to remove what little paint remains.  At first I almost felt guilty for using technology to accomplish this "simple" (but oh so critical) task, but........well, let's just say I was quickly convinced to get over it.

TB  

  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: Maryland
Posted by usmc1371 on Wednesday, April 19, 2006 12:35 AM

Most of the time I don't worry about the waste of paint and just continue on.  Heck, I gotta spend my budgeted hobby money on something.

Jesse

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Wednesday, April 19, 2006 7:16 AM
I'm with TB... I got me one of those Badger paint stirrers and I am sold!  I can stir that paint to an even suspension in 5 seconds with it and be painting by the time I would have been still sitrring with the toothpic back in the old days... I clean the same way, raise it just above the surface of the paint, spin and dunk in thinner and spin again...
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    December 2003
  • From: Indiana
Posted by hkshooter on Wednesday, April 19, 2006 7:18 AM
Thanks for some fantasic ideas, guys! I have some thinking to do now.
  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: SETX. USA
Posted by tho9900 on Thursday, April 20, 2006 7:54 PM
It's really worth the 10 or so dollars for the paint mixer... at first I bought a milk frother at the grocery store which is very similar.  It worked pretty good.. a lot better than the sprue/toothpic thing.. but the Badger one works MUCH better, especially when there is gunky paint in the bottom or the bottle!
---Tom--- O' brave new world, That has such people in it!
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, April 21, 2006 8:45 PM

hkshooter:

I know where your coming from, I'm new to ABing, didn't want to waste the paint, so I bought an HP-AH. My third AB since I have got into it. The AH is great, I can spray a few drops of paint, but i waste more than I use, go figure.

If I had to paint a small piece of wire, I'd stir the paint with the wire to be painted, shake off the wire into the jar, hang it off of something with a small clamp until it dried, and cut to size. Just my thoughts.

By the way, all you people here seem really nice and you all contribute to a great forum, it's nice to know there are places like this to go, learn and share. I enjoy the time I'm able to spend here.

Thanks to all of you.

 

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