
Dylon Dye Products
- vintage AE
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Dylon Dye Products
OK, so I resorted to going to a fabric store for yellow dye. Wow, score! The variety I found, a company called Dylon has a lot to chose from..3 or 4 different shades of blue too.
yes plural, but I am kidding
I was going to get the lingerie whitener on the bottom, but I think my thongs are clean 
- bearrickster
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- vintage AE
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
When you dye the parts - do you boil the parts in the dye like you would if you were dying fabric ????
- vintage AE
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
yup, generally! bring to a boil throw in the dye, stir a bit, reduce heat so it's not boiling and wait til you are happy with the color. Unless, the parts are thin and might disfigure, like tamiya hornet wheels 

Re: Dylon Dye Products
One of my other hobbies is collecting 12" inch action figures and the way I started to dye is, in the microwave, in a large glass jar. That way you can just re-boil, on high for three to four minutes, to achive the shade of color you are looking for. Plus you can keep the dye for later use. Just tryed the peroxide treatment on my vintage rc 10, turned out "GREAT" !!! So now I'm wondering if I want to try and dye some of the parts (ie; wheels, etc. !!)
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
and dont forget the salt i genrally put about half a pound of salt in with two packs of dye i did some shock mount s a few weeks ago i had them just under simmering for about an hour
- vintage AE
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- jwscab
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
salt works in two ways.
the first is due to the phenomenon of saturation and concentrations. Solutions want to be in equilibrium, so if you put salt in a solution, and then put something without salt it in, if it has pores or can absorb a fluid, the salt will help force the motion of the liquid due to equilibrium. solutions want to flow from high concentration to low concentration.
the same reason that sugar will dissolve in water and make the whole container sweet. with the salt in the water, the dye is carried a little better and actually deeper.
the second is that salt raises the boiling point in a ratio based on the amount of salt added. higher temp will open the pores more.
the first is due to the phenomenon of saturation and concentrations. Solutions want to be in equilibrium, so if you put salt in a solution, and then put something without salt it in, if it has pores or can absorb a fluid, the salt will help force the motion of the liquid due to equilibrium. solutions want to flow from high concentration to low concentration.
the same reason that sugar will dissolve in water and make the whole container sweet. with the salt in the water, the dye is carried a little better and actually deeper.
the second is that salt raises the boiling point in a ratio based on the amount of salt added. higher temp will open the pores more.
- vintage AE
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
HUH, thank god I'm not a chemist instead of a geologist. I had to drop out of chemistry in university for a reason I guess
I'm definitely adding the salt for now on. And thank god there is spell check on here, I would have spelt definanitely wrong...I had to take english twice



I'm definitely adding the salt for now on. And thank god there is spell check on here, I would have spelt definanitely wrong...I had to take english twice

- rc10johnny
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- vintage AE
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
Well JohnnySr, looks like you are just north enough to know. I used to live in Leesburg, VA briefly and even if you slip down to southern VA the dialect begins to change.rc10johnny wrote:Yeah,Good thing ya didnt get yer english from da south![]()
In fact I'll be down your way in early Sept for my father inlaw's remarriage, aka crap show from hell

- Coelacanth
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
Have any of you guys tried Krylon Fusion for Plastic? It comes in rattle-cans and is a dye for plastic/vinyl and apparently bonds to the surface, it isn't just a spray-paint. I've used it to dye 40-year-old interior plastic & vinyl interior parts of my '70 Charger that were faded black & nasty off-white. I've been pleased with the results thus far. I don't know how it works on nylon, though...
Completed projects: CYANide Onroad Optima | Zebra Gold Optima | Barney Optima | OptiMutt RWD Mid
Gallery - Coel's Stalls: Marui Galaxy & Shogun Resto-Mods | FrankenBuff AYK Buffalo | 1987 Buick GNX RC12L3
Gallery - Coel's Stalls: Marui Galaxy & Shogun Resto-Mods | FrankenBuff AYK Buffalo | 1987 Buick GNX RC12L3
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Re: Dylon Dye Products
I was wondering the same thing after I saw the t.v. add for Krylon Fusion.Coelacanth wrote:Have any of you guys tried Krylon Fusion for Plastic? It comes in rattle-cans and is a dye for plastic/vinyl and apparently bonds to the surface, it isn't just a spray-paint. I've used it to dye 40-year-old interior plastic & vinyl interior parts of my '70 Charger that were faded black & nasty off-white. I've been pleased with the results thus far. I don't know how it works on nylon, though...
Re: Dylon Dye Products
Krylon Fusion is a paint not a dye- I tried it on a RC Airplane body - all it did was flake off after it dryed. I guess it only works on certain plastics !!
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