> Any idea why it comes in a spray bottle ??
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Craig
It's a nuisance isn't it? What I do is shoot a squirt or two into a small
bottle cap and then apply it with an old brush. Works with aerosol
accelerator too, just gotta be careful when you squirt it.
On Feb 8, 3:19 pm, "cr...@earthlink.net" <cr...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> Any idea why it comes in a spray bottle ??
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Craig
I never spray it. My latest method is to open the accelerator bottle
dunk a Micorbrush in it and then apply to the model. Nothing wasted
- no mess. If you get good at it (not plop the Microbrush in the
glue but slightly away from it then let the accelerator flow into the
glue) you can reuse the Microbrush many times. And even if some glue
gets on the Microbrush it is still usable. Of course Microbrushes are
disposable (if things don't go as planned). :-)
Peteski
On Feb 8, 5:19 pm, "cr...@earthlink.net" <cr...@earthlink.net> wrote:
> Any idea why it comes in a spray bottle ??
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Craig
It is REALLY bad when you have an Alclad finish. The accelerator
seems to really attack Alclad, and with the spray you get it all over.
I have learned to NOT use CA accelerator around Alclad.
Sir Ray - 09 Feb 2008 16:43 GMT
This question piqued my cuirosity, as I have always remembered the
acclerator coming in a spray bottle (and not a particularly fine mist
nozzle either - I currently have an Insta-Set bottle, and the spray
pattern's about the same as my bottle of Bactine in the medicine
cabinet - i.e., not very good).
Two ideas present themselves - one, use a small eyedropper to place
the accelerator on the glue joint (so nothing but accelerator touches
the CA - no brushes glue to the joint here), and two, apply CA to one
surface, apply accelerant to the other surface to be joined, and
attach them together (I haven't tried this one, but it's stated you
get one chance, that's it, so it's not a good technique on days when
you have the model-making yips...)
Possibly when CA acclerator was first concieved, it was for wide CA
glue joints (and especially gap-filling), so a wide spray pattern was
OK (just wash off the excess after the joint was harden...which was
instaneous! Yay!). Although why those spray bottles still dominate,
dunno. Hmm, wonder if a narrow nozzle tube like WD-40 has would
work...
Count DeMoney - 09 Feb 2008 16:56 GMT
I use Testors Accelerator. It's in a little bottle just like their
enamel paints. They give you a little "plastic squeeze bubble" with a
1 inch tube. You dip the tube in the bottle, squeeze the bubble a
little and it picks us a drop or two and you put it where you need
it. Why bother with the spray stuff??
flak monkey - 09 Feb 2008 17:59 GMT
>I use Testors Accelerator. It's in a little bottle just like their
> enamel paints. They give you a little "plastic squeeze bubble" with a
> 1 inch tube. You dip the tube in the bottle, squeeze the bubble a
> little and it picks us a drop or two and you put it where you need
> it. Why bother with the spray stuff??
Just found these whilst looking for something totally unrelated:
http://tinyurl.com/38cfkh
Ed Pirrero - 11 Feb 2008 01:55 GMT
> >I use Testors Accelerator. It's in a little bottle just like their
> > enamel paints. They give you a little "plastic squeeze bubble" with a
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>
> http://tinyurl.com/38cfkh
$5.15 *EACH*?!?!?
I think I might have just peed myself a little. Those guys can be
made for a lot less. I have a stinking box of 1000 of the
precursors. I'll get the label and part number, and make one of the
pictured guys and tell you how to do it.
E.P.
Count DeMoney - 11 Feb 2008 02:14 GMT
I am on my 3rd bottles of the Testors Kicker so I now have 3 of those
little pipettes. They don't seem to degrade in any way. Best of all
they are free with a bottle. With the 40% off coupons at Hobby Lobby,
the whole package is just over a dollar. One hint, I made a 2" square
"cradle" out of 4 wood strips with a hole just big enough for that
little bottle. Now, I will never spill any every again (:>
flak monkey - 16 Feb 2008 11:26 GMT
>> >I use Testors Accelerator. It's in a little bottle just like their
>> > enamel paints. They give you a little "plastic squeeze bubble" with a
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> E.P.
$5.15 gets you a pack of 25.
Peter W. - 10 Feb 2008 06:23 GMT
On Feb 9, 6:51 am, Don Stauffer in Minnesota <stauf...@usfamily.net>
wrote:
> It is REALLY bad when you have an Alclad finish. The accelerator
> seems to really attack Alclad, and with the spray you get it all over.
> I have learned to NOT use CA accelerator around Alclad.
There are at least half-a-dozen different types of CA accelerators.
Some are "hotter" and stinkier than others. Some even contain
acetone!
My favorite is the one from Bob Smith Industries. It is very mild (as
far as not attacking paint and plastic) and it is low odor. I get it
at LHS.
I also have Pacer Industries Zip-Kicker. That one if much hotter and
it attacks both styrene and paint.
Peteski
> there must be a better way other than to spray your model (and hands)
> with the stuff.
I apply Zip Kicker by means of a small flat screwdriver. Sounds odd, but is
very effective...

Signature
Cave Putorium
Steven
Disco58 - 10 Feb 2008 01:07 GMT
I've never seen accelerator in a spray bottle, but then there are a lot of
things I've never seen. The accelerator I use is in an 8oz bottle from
Hobby Lobby, and I just use an old paintbrush or a microbrush. I haven't
had a problem yet with the brushes sticking to things they're not supposed
to.
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Viperdoc - 10 Feb 2008 04:34 GMT
The accelerator is an organic amine- I found that a syringe with a small
needle works great. It allows the application of just a thin line along a
seam, and gives a very controlled application.
Pat Flannery - 10 Feb 2008 06:53 GMT
> I've never seen accelerator in a spray bottle, but then there are a lot of
> things I've never seen. The accelerator I use is in an 8oz bottle from
> Hobby Lobby, and I just use an old paintbrush or a microbrush. I haven't
> had a problem yet with the brushes sticking to things they're not supposed
> to.
I had a thought here. Why not get a bottle of iodine, wash it out well,
and keep the spray-type accelerator in that, using the cap applicator to
apply it where you want?
Pat
I apply a drop of cold water from my finger. A brush or spray application
works as well. The point is one does not need a chemical accelerator that
crazes plastic. Cold water works just as well and does not craze plastic.
> Any idea why it comes in a spray bottle ??
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Craig
S - 10 Feb 2008 13:21 GMT
Back in the dark ages when the thickened and slower CAs came out, flying
modelers where using it for fillets to strengthen connections between
structural components. They would form several fillets then spritz it
to set the CA. Beats waiting a day or so for open air cures of the CA.
Since the joints were internal there was no problem with overspray.
That's how I remember it at least.
S
> I apply a drop of cold water from my finger. A brush or spray application
> works as well. The point is one does not need a chemical accelerator that
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>>
>> Craig