Hi guys,
I have a question that maybe one of you more experienced folks can help answer.
I recently finished new molds for my parts (used Alumilite QuickSet). The molds turned out really well, and the opaque SmoothOn comes out really nicely.
However, when I used my water-clear Alumilite, I got a goopy, yellow mess. The next time I was more careful, and it was less goopy, but still very yellow. The third time around I decided that maybe I'm just having really bad luck with this fresh batch of resin, and I cast in the new and the old mold from the same mix:
http://pat.suwalski.net/temp/refit1000/ ... yellow.jpg
The new one's on the left, and it turned out less yellow and firmer than the previous castings, but the old mold still produced a significantly clearer and harder casting.
Is this normal for clear resins to need a broken-in mold? Is there some logical explanation to all this?
Thanks guys.
New Mold + Clear Resin = Yellow?
Moderators: DasPhule, Moderators
Or just cast some more regular parts from the molds to naturally leech out the alcohol, then try a few clears.
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Models
Build your fleet
YOUR way.
http://www.modular-models.com
----------------------------------------------------------
"I know you think you understand what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant." - Alan Greenspan
____________________________________
"The customer that spends the least complains the most."
Thanks for the advice. I actually did bake them at 175 for about an hour before that last casting and that helped a little. I always use Stoner.
I noticed that the colour of the rubber is starting to fade in places. I assume this means it's stabilizing. I guess when the fresh rubber smell goes away I'll know it's ready.
I guess I'll start building up the opaque inventory, then. Thanks, guys.
I noticed that the colour of the rubber is starting to fade in places. I assume this means it's stabilizing. I guess when the fresh rubber smell goes away I'll know it's ready.
I guess I'll start building up the opaque inventory, then. Thanks, guys.
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