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The Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, CO has obtained an
F-104 Starfighter from the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. The canopy seems to have some sort of paint or coating on the inside of the canopy. Does anyone know of a way to remove it without damaging the canopy? Thank you in advance for any help you might be able to provide. Jason Unwin Aerospace Education Officer Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum (719)948-9219 |
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On Sun, 09 Nov 2003 20:26:01 GMT, Orval Fairbairn
wrote: In article , (Jason) wrote: The Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, CO has obtained an F-104 Starfighter from the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. The canopy seems to have some sort of paint or coating on the inside of the canopy. Does anyone know of a way to remove it without damaging the canopy? Thank you in advance for any help you might be able to provide. Jason Unwin Aerospace Education Officer Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum (719)948-9219 DO NOT use paint remover! The TCE in the paint remover will certainly craze the plastic. You might try denatured alcohol or isopropyl alcohol, which will not attack the plexiglass. You might have to resort to polishing the paint away with up to 2000 grit wet sandpaper, plus polishing compound. I've used the ClearFix System and overspray was removed easily. Otherwise polishing with the 2000 paper will go the trick. |
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"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message
news ![]() In article , (Jason) wrote: The Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, CO has obtained an F-104 Starfighter from the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. The canopy seems to have some sort of paint or coating on the inside of the canopy. Does anyone know of a way to remove it without damaging the canopy? Thank you in advance for any help you might be able to provide. Jason Unwin Aerospace Education Officer Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum (719)948-9219 DO NOT use paint remover! The TCE in the paint remover will certainly craze the plastic. Try a milder sodium hydroxide solution such as that found in some oven cleaners. Many plastics modellers use oven cleaner aerosols as paint strippers (acrylics, enamels, and some lacquers) on styrene plastics without affecting them. If it won't hurt clear styrene it's unlikely to hurt perspex. Ezy Off is reputed the best but is stronger than some of the weaker non-caustic non-fuming varieties The weaker oven cleaners (mostly generics) shouldn't harm perspex and are a good starting point. Of course, try an inconspicuos spot first. Odds are the paint won't be anything more than enamel, otherwise the perspex would already be damaged by lacquers. Assuming you get the paint off and the perspex is still damaged. A good set of micro-mesh polishing clothes (which I believe are aimed more at aviation than scale models) will remove minor scratches etc. If the perspex is crazed, very little is going to save it, although polishing techniques can make it presentable. -- The Raven http://www.80scartoons.co.uk/batfinkquote.mp3 ** President of the ozemail.* and uunet.* NG's ** since August 15th 2000. |
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If the canopy is made of Lexan - and I admit to ignorance here - you can
probably remove the paint with Acetone. I'm rebuilding a '58 Champ, and have cleaned a bunch of gunk off the windshield so far, with nary a mark on it. Plexiglas is quickly destroyed by acetone, but not Lexan. Acetone is a very powerful solvent, and readily eats paints. Powder-coatings, too, I learned. The hard way, of course! Jon B. "Jason" wrote in message m... The Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum in Pueblo, CO has obtained an F-104 Starfighter from the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs. The canopy seems to have some sort of paint or coating on the inside of the canopy. Does anyone know of a way to remove it without damaging the canopy? Thank you in advance for any help you might be able to provide. Jason Unwin Aerospace Education Officer Pueblo Weisbrod Aircraft Museum (719)948-9219 |
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