oadie wrote:I've had even Simple Green weaken
CA glue bonds. If you soak them long enough to lift the paint, best prepare yourself for reassembly. If you used
CA, the glue residue is easy to remove - just chip it off with a knife. Assuming it weakened enough to pop the joint, it should have weakened enough to flake off without much trouble.
Luckily, for you, Infinity models are metal - they laugh at solvents. You could drop them in straight acetone and hit them with a brass brush (by hand, that is - don't go gabbing a rotary tool!) without causing damage to the details. Thin parts can be fiddly to clean, but I've never damaged them in the process. Just don't vigorously scrub anything that isn't supported. If you have a thin sword, antenna, etc. lay it across a finger and scrub one side at a time. With sufficient soaking, it shouldn't take much force to remove the paint. Same applies to plastic, should you need to strip those Malifaux models. I've broken bits, before, but never during stripping. Just takes a long soak and a light touch, when the model calls for it.
[edit:] Extra good news! Vallejo PU primer makes stripping easy. It bonds strongly to
itself, but it's not an etching primer. Once it starts lifting, whole swaths of paint will start flaking off. And don't worry about detail loss - unless you're using some super caustic acid of doom, it won't hurt metal models at all and will take time to damage plastic. Things ike Simple Green and Fairy Power are pretty much safe indefinitely. I've left models in
SG for weeks with no ill effect. In fact, it was a good thing - the force of the water from a running tap took 90%+ of the paint off, as it had so much time to soften and lift.