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transfuring paint


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On 4/8/2018 at 3:53 PM, Art Anderson said:

A cheap polyethylene "turkey baster"  works great, as do the "squeeze bulb" droppers from Testors.

Art

And make sure it is polyethylene (the slightly milky, soft, waxy looking plastic).  I've seen basters made from crystal clear plastic (either acrylic or polystyrene). Those will be attacked by strong solvents in paints. Unless of course the paint is water-based.

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18 hours ago, peteski said:

And make sure it is polyethylene (the slightly milky, soft, waxy looking plastic).  I've seen basters made from crystal clear plastic (either acrylic or polystyrene). Those will be attacked by strong solvents in paints. Unless of course the paint is water-based.

Peter. the Testors/Modelmaster units are polyethylene--I've used them for years now, with good results.

Art

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4 hours ago, Art Anderson said:

Peter. the Testors/Modelmaster units are polyethylene--I've used them for years now, with good results.

Art

Now I'm confused.  Sure the hobby ones are safe since they are designed to work with those hobby paints. But I thought that we were discussing turkey basters.  Those are the ones I've seen where some not made from polyethylene.

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  • 1 month later...

After you've got the paint properly stirred up, use a 'stick' and pour. By pressing a stick (cocktail stirrer, toothpick, kitchen skewer, etc.) against your lower bottle lip you engage molecular attraction and the fluid will trail down the stick into your receptacle rather than try and drip down the sides of the bottle.  Old school painter's technique. Practice with some water first if you need to understand the action.

hth

Keeper

 

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21 hours ago, The Keeper said:

After you've got the paint properly stirred up, use a 'stick' and pour. By pressing a stick (cocktail stirrer, toothpick, kitchen skewer, etc.) against your lower bottle lip you engage molecular attraction and the fluid will trail down the stick into your receptacle rather than try and drip down the sides of the bottle.  Old school painter's technique. Practice with some water first if you need to understand the action.

hth

Keeper

 

I use this method for pouring resin into molds - it works very well.

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