Mr Color Thinner, available in 250 and 400mL bottles cleans the brushes, see link below. Cheers Derek\ said:I have been experimenting with this product and my brush is now caked in hard filler. I have tried cleaning it with Water, Medea Airbrush Cleaner, Muc-off and Xtracrylix Thinners but none has worked. How do I clean my brush please?
Yes I thought the same cellulose but with some other ingredient to slow & make it less aggresive & non destructive of model plastic than pure cellulose.\ said:I'll bet you that Mr Color Thinner is essentially cellulose thinners.All cellulose thinners are a mixture of various solvents,so no two brands are necessarily the same.
Cheers
Steve
Cellulous thinners are a synthetic solvent and are based on Ethylene glycol, where as Mr Color Thinner is an organic solvent based on petroleum products; it does not attack bare plastic. I have used it to remove dried paint from models without damaging details and to thin Mr Color range of aqueous paints. Cheers Derek\ said:I'll bet you that Mr Color Thinner is essentially cellulose thinners.All cellulose thinners are a mixture of various solvents,so no two brands are necessarily the same.
Cheers
Steve
Speaking as a chemist (well an ex chemist really) and,post degree,an organic chemist no less, that makes no real sense.\ said:Cellulous thinners are a synthetic solvent and are based on Ethylene glycol, where as Mr Color Thinner is an organic solvent based on petroleum products; it does not attack bare plastic. I have used it to remove dried paint from models without damaging details and to thin Mr Color range of aqueous paints. Cheers Derek
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