very oily resin kit
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very oily resin kit
Hi all,
I've got a small resin model (just a few inches long) that's got a very bad petroleum smell. After handling it, my hands smell like I spilled raw gasoline on them.
I'm soaking the thing in Simple Green now to try to clean off any mold release. My plan was to prime with Rustoleum Painter's Touch spray primer. However, I am concerned that there are going to be oils leaking out that will ruin the primer coat.
Is this one of those cases where I have to heat the resin with a lamp to drive out the volatiles?
Many thanks,
Jeff
I've got a small resin model (just a few inches long) that's got a very bad petroleum smell. After handling it, my hands smell like I spilled raw gasoline on them.
I'm soaking the thing in Simple Green now to try to clean off any mold release. My plan was to prime with Rustoleum Painter's Touch spray primer. However, I am concerned that there are going to be oils leaking out that will ruin the primer coat.
Is this one of those cases where I have to heat the resin with a lamp to drive out the volatiles?
Many thanks,
Jeff
- Marco Scheloske
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Could it be that the resin is till curing/gassing out? When I got my Anigrand Star Destroyer I got a contact high when I opened the box from the fumes!!!! It wasn't oily but the smell went away after a few days. Maybe soak it and let it sit for a few days before primering.
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This is just a thought for you guys who run into this. I have never tried it, as I have had excellent luck with resin kits. If the issue is uncured resin leaching out, what about going to Wal Mart and purchasing some of that fluid clean up granules? Then, take affected kit and bury it in a bucket of said oil/fluid cleaner granules for a month. The stuff will pull oil out of concrete. My little batches of resin are certainly not nearly as thick as motor oil, burned or new.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
I hope this helps.
Kenny
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Just get a bag of kitty litter, it's the same thing. Got a local cabinet shop nearby? Sawdust works just as well, and they'll let you have as much as you can haul away.Lt. Z0mBe wrote:....and purchasing some of that fluid clean up granules?
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My luck with resin which is exuding "oil" is poor. I have had some luck with grinding away the oily area and replacing it with Milliput. Once long ago I was able to save a piece by mixing Milliput and water to a thin slurry and then applying multiple coats over several days to "seal in" the oil.
In my experience this happens when the resin gets too old.
In my experience this happens when the resin gets too old.
- Marco Scheloske
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Marco, your old oily kit must be violating conservation of mass at least!
I soaked the thing overnight, and the odor is basically gone. I will let it sit a couple of weeks and see what happens. If it seems good, I'll prime and wait a while before finishing.
I'd take a mold and cast my own copy, except I've never done either of those things before. The startup cost is about $75, so I've never been willing to take a go at it.
Thanks to all,
Jeff
I soaked the thing overnight, and the odor is basically gone. I will let it sit a couple of weeks and see what happens. If it seems good, I'll prime and wait a while before finishing.
I'd take a mold and cast my own copy, except I've never done either of those things before. The startup cost is about $75, so I've never been willing to take a go at it.
Thanks to all,
Jeff
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I had a figure kit that wouldn't stop oozing after multiple baths in Simple Green, Bleech-White, etc. I ended up returning it to the mfr. and got another one with the same problems.
Over the course of 6-8 months I cleaned the new kit on a fairly regular basis with strong degreasers in warm water, after a day or so the oily residue started coming back out. I eventually soaked and cleaned it several times in lacquer thinner and that seemed to work, the seeping stopped long enough so I could get some lacquer primer on the kit to seal it.
Turned me off of garage kits for several years, it was the last straw in a series of bad kits.
Ken
Over the course of 6-8 months I cleaned the new kit on a fairly regular basis with strong degreasers in warm water, after a day or so the oily residue started coming back out. I eventually soaked and cleaned it several times in lacquer thinner and that seemed to work, the seeping stopped long enough so I could get some lacquer primer on the kit to seal it.
Turned me off of garage kits for several years, it was the last straw in a series of bad kits.
Ken
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I've got oodles of sawdust and it doesn't seem to pull the oil out of the concrete like the granules do. As for the kitty litter versus oil wick stuff, I've heard that, but I've never been able to verify it (not that it matters ).Beaveranger wrote:Just get a bag of kitty litter, it's the same thing. Got a local cabinet shop nearby? Sawdust works just as well, and they'll let you have as much as you can haul away.Lt. Z0mBe wrote:....and purchasing some of that fluid clean up granules?
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It depends on the kitty litter. Both are designed to absorb any nearby moisture. How well they work varies by brand.
But there are some that'll do a great job on spilled oil.
And some that don't do as good a job.
Just don't ask me to remember which is which it's been a decade since I worked in a shop.
Ew. that made me feel old
But there are some that'll do a great job on spilled oil.
And some that don't do as good a job.
Just don't ask me to remember which is which it's been a decade since I worked in a shop.
Ew. that made me feel old
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The trick to the sawdust is patience. It doesn't work as fast as the kitty litter, and sometimes I have even had to put something heavy on the spot to assist. But it will do the trick. Of course, I rarely worry about actually drawing it completely out of the concrete. This is an area of the workshop that is for working on cars, so a black spot does not bother me.Lt. Z0mBe wrote:I've got oodles of sawdust and it doesn't seem to pull the oil out of the concrete like the granules do. As for the kitty litter versus oil wick stuff, I've heard that, but I've never been able to verify it (not that it matters ).
And yeah, some brands of kitty litter work better than others. As a general rule, the cheap stuff is the cheap stuff. You get what you pay for.
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- Alex Dumas
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I have tried many things to stop bad castings from 'bleeding' (simple green, baby powder, oven, primers of all kind, etc.) and nothing worked on the long run except sealing the affected area with a very thin coat of CA glue (Wave's black CA in this case). Of course casting a new one is best if it is worth the cost.
Alex
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- AbsoluteSciFi
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MMM fuuuummes...robiwon wrote:Could it be that the resin is till curing/gassing out? When I got my Anigrand Star Destroyer I got a contact high when I opened the box from the fumes!!!! It wasn't oily but the smell went away after a few days. Maybe soak it and let it sit for a few days before primering.
If a kit is shipped too early, and is wrapped up tight, the fumes can often re-gel the resin, making it softer where it condensed on the parts. They would pretty much have to pop it out of the mold and shove it in the box!
Sadly there is not a good cure from that point forward, but it will harden slowly, but it may take longer than you want to wait. This is one possibility, another is that the resin was mixed poorly, as stated above, and there will be no cure for that. In either case, warm sunshine will help. UV light hardens the resin, and too much makes it brittle and yellow.
I have heard about cases in which the resin itself is shipped from the manufacturer in a bad batch, and does just what you stated, never stops giving up residue, this is pretty much a game ender.
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Hello all,
I realized I never said how the story turned out! The little model had been left to soak. After it came out, the smell was basically gone. I let it sit for a week or so, still no smell. I sprayed it with Rustoleum semi-gloss black (it was an X-15), and crossed my fingers and waited.
The paint seems to have taken, and, hopefully, that's the end of the story.
Thanks to all for your advice and sharing your experiences.
Jeff
I realized I never said how the story turned out! The little model had been left to soak. After it came out, the smell was basically gone. I let it sit for a week or so, still no smell. I sprayed it with Rustoleum semi-gloss black (it was an X-15), and crossed my fingers and waited.
The paint seems to have taken, and, hopefully, that's the end of the story.
Thanks to all for your advice and sharing your experiences.
Jeff
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Dolomite is the name of the product. It was used as a substrate in saltwater and african cichlid aquariums as it would help maintain a high PH. I had 4/5 gas station slash repair shops buying 100lbs. of the stuff from me at a time back in the day. They would sprinkle it on top of the oil leaks, tranny and brake fluid spills, and any other liquidy mess that would hit the floor. It would absorb the spill over night then they would sweep it away in the morning.Lt. Z0mBe wrote:This is just a thought for you guys who run into this. I have never tried it, as I have had excellent luck with resin kits. If the issue is uncured resin leaching out, what about going to Wal Mart and purchasing some of that fluid clean up granules? Then, take affected kit and bury it in a bucket of said oil/fluid cleaner granules for a month. The stuff will pull oil out of concrete. My little batches of resin are certainly not nearly as thick as motor oil, burned or new.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
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Hi, thought I'd add my two cents. Same thing happened to me, tonight, after a wash with some Simple Green. It was a VA 22nd century Romulan BoP, and after washing it there was an oily residue on the surface of the yellow resin, but not the clear. I washed it again, thinking I just didn't get everything, but same story. Let it soak for 30 minutes, along with a few JH bug fighters from Odyssey Slipways (which were NOT leaching prior to soaking) and a Gizmo BoP (grey resin), and same story, only JUST with the yellow resin. Every yellow-resin kit had the oily residue after the simple green soaking.
I know association is not causation, and I always wash with simple green and haven't had this happen before, but I think there's a connection here... come to think of it most of my other resin work is either with Forge World grey resin, or Godzilla kits from Japan (and if I recall correctly I started using simple green after I stopped building those - soapy water only). I'm certainly not going to test any more of my resin to find out if I'm right or not, but just be wary that it may be the simple green that's doing it, as it seems to be a common factor.
-Jason
I know association is not causation, and I always wash with simple green and haven't had this happen before, but I think there's a connection here... come to think of it most of my other resin work is either with Forge World grey resin, or Godzilla kits from Japan (and if I recall correctly I started using simple green after I stopped building those - soapy water only). I'm certainly not going to test any more of my resin to find out if I'm right or not, but just be wary that it may be the simple green that's doing it, as it seems to be a common factor.
-Jason
- Lt. Z0mBe
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Good thinking. I'd never considered that in this line of thinking.jasonius wrote:Hi, thought I'd add my two cents. Same thing happened to me, tonight, after a wash with some Simple Green. It was a VA 22nd century Romulan BoP, and after washing it there was an oily residue on the surface of the yellow resin, but not the clear. I washed it again, thinking I just didn't get everything, but same story. Let it soak for 30 minutes, along with a few JH bug fighters from Odyssey Slipways (which were NOT leaching prior to soaking) and a Gizmo BoP (grey resin), and same story, only JUST with the yellow resin. Every yellow-resin kit had the oily residue after the simple green soaking.
I know association is not causation, and I always wash with simple green and haven't had this happen before, but I think there's a connection here... come to think of it most of my other resin work is either with Forge World grey resin, or Godzilla kits from Japan (and if I recall correctly I started using simple green after I stopped building those - soapy water only). I'm certainly not going to test any more of my resin to find out if I'm right or not, but just be wary that it may be the simple green that's doing it, as it seems to be a common factor.
-Jason
Well, I do know that Super Clean will leave a film if it itself is not washed off or rinsed off with really hot water. Perhaps try hitting the suspect pieces with Windex; when I strip painted pieces with Super Clean, I have to then wash with Windex or Dawn to clean the oily film off.
Kenny
Here is another 2 cents.
Good resin is expensive stuff. Manufacturers in the GK industry are always looking for ways to save money. One way is using an 'extender' for resin. A very commonly used extender is kerosense, because it's easily available and cheap.
Kerosene is also sometimes used as a release agent, with diluted petroleum jelly.
The problem with kerosene however, is twofold. It smells, and it can cause the problem you're experiencing. Personally, I would avoid any kit with this issue, but as always, you don't know it until you open the box...
Good resin is expensive stuff. Manufacturers in the GK industry are always looking for ways to save money. One way is using an 'extender' for resin. A very commonly used extender is kerosense, because it's easily available and cheap.
Kerosene is also sometimes used as a release agent, with diluted petroleum jelly.
The problem with kerosene however, is twofold. It smells, and it can cause the problem you're experiencing. Personally, I would avoid any kit with this issue, but as always, you don't know it until you open the box...
Ok well I can't smell it, but that doesn't mean much. I can't smell anything half the time...
So what's the solution? Dawn? Window cleaner? Comet or Ajax? I can't very well coat the whole model in CA glue to seal it... I'm afraid to prime and paint these now, and I have about 10 small models that are doing the same thing with bare resin staring me in the face.
So what's the solution? Dawn? Window cleaner? Comet or Ajax? I can't very well coat the whole model in CA glue to seal it... I'm afraid to prime and paint these now, and I have about 10 small models that are doing the same thing with bare resin staring me in the face.
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I have a professional degreaser agent used by rolls royce engines (aerospace) which cleans pretty much any "Oily" residue off resin, plastic or metal.
It will soften most glues though, including CAs... cant think how i'd get it to you in the USA though, however another solution is...
"SUgar Soap" - the problem is, again, that I dont know if you can get that in the USA< or if you can it has a different name, but it will also remove pretty much any oily residue.
Haivng said that.. "Petroleum smell" sounds bad... is this a polyester resin kit then?... cant abide polyester myself and never, ever use it.
Wasnt there stories about people buling out polyester reins with diesel some time back (many years ago)? Diesel is too expensive nowadays mind you, well int he UK anyway..never found ou if the "diesel thing" was true or an old wives tale.
Any resin that continues to leech any residue though - return to the manufacturer, aint worth the itme messing around with it and its their problem to fix, not yours.
We'd replace such a kit immediately. /em shrugs cant say i have ver had the problem though except if a mix hasnt been fully mixed, but that almost always leaves soft-spots in polyurethane resins... is polyester any different?
Certianly tings like mould-rlease agent are easy to remove with sugar-soap or professional degreasers and wont "re-appear"
It will soften most glues though, including CAs... cant think how i'd get it to you in the USA though, however another solution is...
"SUgar Soap" - the problem is, again, that I dont know if you can get that in the USA< or if you can it has a different name, but it will also remove pretty much any oily residue.
Haivng said that.. "Petroleum smell" sounds bad... is this a polyester resin kit then?... cant abide polyester myself and never, ever use it.
Wasnt there stories about people buling out polyester reins with diesel some time back (many years ago)? Diesel is too expensive nowadays mind you, well int he UK anyway..never found ou if the "diesel thing" was true or an old wives tale.
Any resin that continues to leech any residue though - return to the manufacturer, aint worth the itme messing around with it and its their problem to fix, not yours.
We'd replace such a kit immediately. /em shrugs cant say i have ver had the problem though except if a mix hasnt been fully mixed, but that almost always leaves soft-spots in polyurethane resins... is polyester any different?
Certianly tings like mould-rlease agent are easy to remove with sugar-soap or professional degreasers and wont "re-appear"
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correct, i received a slush cast car body that is still oily, even after cleaning, sanding, etc. the caster admitted he stuff up the mix and sent a replacement.Marco Scheloske wrote:It may be one of those cases where you have to throw it into the waste, as it may NEVER stop to be oily - mostly this happens because of a badly mixed resin.
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