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A:
You’ve
made the perfect mold and have just poured Smooth-Cast liquid
plastic into the mold to make a reproduction. The plastic
cures, and you demold the piece to reveal a casting that looks
exactly like the original. Your next step is to paint the
casting for outdoor display, but when you try to apply the
paint, it beads up on the casting surface and won’t stick.
Urethane
plastics can be hard to paint, and there are a number of
variables that can affect the outcome. Using a release agent
to release the casting from the mold, for example, makes
painting a casting almost impossible. Removing release agent
from the casting surface can be difficult and is another labor
step.
If you
are using a urethane rubber mold and casting urethane resin,
you must use a release agent to facilitate
demold. Using a silicone rubber mold without release agent
limits the production life of the mold by 1/2 if you are
casting urethane resin.
There
are a couple of ways to get the benefits of using a release
agent and still have a casting ready for painting following
demold;
1.
Powder
Coating Technique
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Powder coating the mold with Ure-Fil 7, baby powder or talc following the
application of a release agent. Here is how it works;
Prior to
casting the resin, Ease Release 200 is applied to the mold
followed by a powder coating of Ure-Fil 7.
An air
hose is used to blow any excess powder from the mold. The
urethane resin is then cast into the mold.
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Mann Ease Release™ 200 is sprayed on mold. |
Ure-Fil 7
is brushed onto the surface of
the mold. |
Excess powder is blown away. |
Finished castings have paint-ready surface. |
The
casting comes out of the mold with a dry, matte finish. An
auto body primer is applied, followed by an acrylic paint and
finally an acrylic sealer. The major advantage to powder
coating is that there is no release agent to remove when the
casting comes out of the mold. Models can be immediately
primed and painted.
2. Apply Primer To The Mold Surface . . .
The other way is to use spray primer. Here’s how it
works:
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1)
Mold release is sprayed into the mold cavity. |
2)
Auto body primer is then sprayed into mold cavity. |
3)
Resin is cast or sprayed behind the primer. |
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4)
Casting comes out of the mold
ready to paint. |
5)
Spray paint then adheres to
casting surface without a problem. |
Following the application of a release agent, an auto body
primer is applied to the mold cavity. Casting resin is then
mixed and poured or sprayed. The auto body primer bonds to
the casting’s surface and comes out of the mold ready for
painting.
Customers contact us regularly asking which primer works best
as a foundation for painting their Smooth-On plastic
castings. To settle the question once and for all, we tested
over 30 aerosol primers and found that most did not work, or
worked poorly at best.
The
low-quality primer would “bead up” on the surface of the
casting.
Whether
applied to the rubber mold surface or applied to cured
castings (no release agent used), two primers did stand out,
providing excellent adhesion and the best for painting.
Plasti-Kote™ Sandable Primer –
can be found at Auto Zone and other auto supply stores in the
U.S. Contact: Plasti-Kote in Medina, OH Tel. 800 431 5928 or
www.plasti-kote.com
Bulldog™ Adhesion Promoter -
Contact: W.M. Barr Co. in Memphis, TN Tel. 800 398 3892 or
www.wmbarr.com. Or order online at www.levineautoparts.com





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