RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold (what colors) -
tab10672 - 09-15-2014
One "paint" swirl trick I actually learned from my 17 yo daughter (she uses this trick to paint her finger nails) use a thin pan of water, pour/spay your separate paint colors into the water as enamel will float like oil, swirl the colors together like you want it to look, then dip your part straight down into it, flip it over and let it dry then clear coat and smooth it out.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold (what colors) -
OldRestorer - 09-16-2014
Cool,
I will have to try that!
Kirk
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold (what colors) -
OldRestorer - 09-18-2014
Ok,
50 ready for paint!
I will be making them in colored plastic but not for a few weeks. No money for it right now.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold (what colors) -
OldRestorer - 09-18-2014
OK,
I made 10 black, 10 white, 20 lighter brown and 20 darker brown.
What do you guys think are the best colors to do?
Which brown is better to match the original?
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Ron Ramirez - 09-18-2014
OldRestorer Wrote:Which brown is better to match the original?
The darker brown. The 41-226 "Sled" used this color.
If you still have the list I sent you previously, you will note that none of these Philco sets used a black escutcheon/grille. If you can find a lighter ivory color paint, the ivory versions will look very good.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
tab10672 - 09-18-2014
Kirk,
Those look great and hopefully your grills will bring many sets back to life.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
OldRestorer - 09-18-2014
Thanks Todd,
I just hope the $45.00 price tag will not kill the whole thing. That will not even make me even and thats if I sell them all.
Thanks Ron, I will definitely get the colors you suggest. I really thought there were black grills..... Maybe I saw one someone painted?
I will color half of the lighter brown ones with the darker brown and half of the white with light ivory
Kirk
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
OldRestorer - 09-18-2014
Ok, antique white was the best I could find. The ivory was greyish and kind of sparkley.
What do you think?
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Ron Ramirez - 09-18-2014
Looks like a brand new part (which, of course, it is).
Allow me to congratulate you. You have done an amazing job on these parts!
Since you also participate over at the Alternative Radio Forum, ask Gary Rabbitt over there what color paint he used on my 38-12CBI. Now that would be the perfect shade of ivory for those grilles. The antique white looks good, though.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
OldRestorer - 09-18-2014
I need to find something yellowed... Maybe I can put them in a small room and smoke a ton of cigarettes for a month or 2 and they will get that patina....
Or I could ask Garyrabbit? Is that his id?
I have never seen him on the boards.
Kirk
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Ron Ramirez - 09-18-2014
I think over there, his handle is "gary rabbitt" (all lowercase). He is one of the good guys there.
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
sedwards - 09-21-2014
How do we place an order, I don't need it painted. Thanks!
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Eliot Ness - 09-22-2014
I saw the grills at Kutztown and Kirk did a great job, they look wonderful. I told a friend about them and he liked them so much he bought two!
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Jayce - 09-23-2014
Those are looking really good! Might be a good reason for me to stop avoiding Philcos with those grills now! I somtimes find those sets for sale cheap, but, ugh, the grills on them look like mutants from a horror film!
RE: Grill time! Making a replacement grill mold NEW PICS -
Arran - 09-25-2014
Kirk;
Were you having problems with paint adhesion, the pain looks like it wrinkled on some of those grilles? If so you may have to give them a good wash in a degreaser, like hot water and TSP, first and then prime them. What sort of plastic resin were you using to cast these with, epoxy? Polyester?
Regards
Arran