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I have been looking for an alternative to squadron putty for years, but this stuff is not it! The MSDS reads like a nightmare! Are there any good non-shrinking hobby putties out there that don't contain Toluene, Xylene, Ethylbenzene or pthalates?
Jeeze! I am either going to grow a third arm or lose enough brain cells to forget my own name. Any ideas?
Chris
A veteran is someone who, at one point in their life, wrote a blank check made payable to "The United States of America," for an amount of "up to and including my life."
for wing-fuselage seams, I like to use squadron green putty and smooth it with acetone based nail polish remover. Most of the time, this removes any need for sanding which is always a pain the that area.
My website: http://waihobbies.wkhc.net
For tiny seams I like typewriter's correction fluid. Otherwise I just go with super glue.
eboggs thanks guys.. i guess i shoulda said what im usin it for.. Mainly to seal up the cracks and crevises from the two halves of a model or wing-to-fuselage gap...is the 3M good for this? or the CA? whatever that is? ha Ethan
thanks guys.. i guess i shoulda said what im usin it for..
Mainly to seal up the cracks and crevises from the two halves of a model or wing-to-fuselage gap...is the 3M good for this? or the CA? whatever that is? ha
Ethan
Yes Ethan that is what the 3M Acryl blue is used for.
I also use it and here is a photo to show you how big of a tube you get for about $20.
By the way, the "CA" that Rick referred to is Cyanoacrylate glue also known as super glue such as Zap-A-Gap which I prefer.
I also use the 3M Acryl Blue, but I find Mr Surfacer 500 very useful for smaller seams. I also use CA rather than putty on very small seams/gaps.
Regards, Rick
Drywall Putty? That's more used on doing ground work for a diorama base. The best modeling putty isn't for modeling but is the best there is IMO. 3M Acryl Blue which can be purchased from automotive supply stores or vendors that cater to the auto body repair businesses. This putty goes on thin and feathers very nicely. it accepts paint and doesn't shrink.
Gerald "Hawkeye" Voigt
http://hawkeyes-squawkbox.com/
"Its not the workbench that makes the model, it is the modeler at the workbench."
what kind of putty do you all use? I tried some dry wall putty...paint didnt seem to like it real well...
thanks
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