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Made in us
Sneaky Lictor





I'm fairly certain brake fluid is usable, but what about the more household types of strippers like Pine Sol, Simple Green, Dettol? Are they reusable for multiple models?

In the works

Warhammer 40k. Enjoy it or go play something else. Life is too short to complain.
 
   
Made in us
Gargantuan Gargant





Binghamton, NY

Yep. They supposedly lose a degree of potency, over time, but I've stripped several models in the same small vat of Simple Green over the span of a few years. When it started to get decidedly murky from all of the dissolved paint flecks, I ran it through a coffee filter and rinsed the sludge out of the container. Still works and there's plenty left in the bottle to give it a boost when it slows down noticeably.

The Dreadnote wrote:But the Emperor already has a shrine, in the form of your local Games Workshop. You honour him by sacrificing your money to the plastic effigies of his warriors. In time, your devotion will be rewarded with the gift of having even more effigies to worship.
 
   
Made in us
Sneaky Lictor





I see. Yeah my container of Simple Green is a wee bit murky, like a faded dark green color atm

In the works

Warhammer 40k. Enjoy it or go play something else. Life is too short to complain.
 
   
Made in us
Shrieking Traitor Sentinel Pilot




New Bedford, MA

I've been using the same tub of LA Awesome concentrate since last fall. It's grey and filled with paint sludge, but despite being topped off with water a few times it still works.

I'll probably invest a whole dollar in a fresh bottle though soon.

I notice my posts seem to bring threads to a screeching halt. Considering the content of most threads on dakka, you're welcome. 
   
Made in us
Sneaky Lictor





That sounds really good actually. I really hate tossing out strippers, but I've already burnt though an entire bottle.

In the works

Warhammer 40k. Enjoy it or go play something else. Life is too short to complain.
 
   
Made in us
Navigator





Carbondale, IL

 Lobomalo wrote:
That sounds really good actually. I really hate tossing out strippers, but I've already burnt though an entire bottle.


I found the opposite problem with one of my tubs of simple green -- the color faded from the liquid, so it's a lighter green than it was. Otherwise, the full-concentrate stuff is cheap enough that buying a new bottle every other year isn't a problem (and I use the stuff for cleaning anyway).

SIUC Strategic Games Society, a Roleplaying/Tabletop/Card student organization/club at Southern Illinois University - Carbondale
 Vermis wrote:
 Bronzefists42 wrote:
I noticed that the plastic glue label recommends wearing something akin to a hazmat suit when handling the glue. I have been using it for years and never used gloves or anything nor do I know anyone who does. ShouldI be worried for my health?

Well, there's a slight risk of gluing something together with it. Only slight, mind.

 
   
Made in gb
Regular Dakkanaut





Brake fluid? That stuff does wierd and wonderfull things to plastic.
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending




Sydney

99% isopropyl alcohol should retain potency over time, just needs a filter occasionally (and to be enclosed).

I imagine brake fluid will last forever, and I hope it does because I am terrified of throwing it out.
   
Made in us
Shrieking Traitor Sentinel Pilot




New Bedford, MA

kb_lock wrote:
99% isopropyl alcohol should retain potency over time, just needs a filter occasionally (and to be enclosed).

I imagine brake fluid will last forever, and I hope it does because I am terrified of throwing it out.


For some reason I find alcohol doesn't work as well for me as a degreaser, but it's still useful. The only problem is it evaporates quickly.

I notice my posts seem to bring threads to a screeching halt. Considering the content of most threads on dakka, you're welcome. 
   
Made in us
Hardened Veteran Guardsman





NYC

Pine Sol turns your plastics into a science experiment and don't like the idea of handling brake fluid. I use Simple Green and its worked perfectly fine for me. It doesn't strip primer off of plastic however, but if they're your models and not second hand with crappy ebay undercoats that shouldn't be of concern.
   
Made in us
Lone Wolf Sentinel Pilot





Los Angeles, CA, USA

Superclean is working very well for me and I am on my 4th big batch of models. It also takes primer off of plastics. Be sure to wear gloves though, that stuff will dry your hands out something fierce.
   
 
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