Will this process work on other polymers as well?
Will this process work on other polymers as well?
Its only until we have nothing that we're free to do anything
The 2nd Amendment : Washington didn't use his right to free speech to defeat the British, he shot them.
it'll depend on the polymer.
I bought a dark green Plano 50rnd ammo box and wanted to dye it black to make it different from my other ones.
Even after 20 minutes BOILING in a FULL pack of Rit Black dye it only got to a dark navy color.
So, while it did dye the polymer, it didn't quite meet the intent.
But it was 'close enough' lol
.
Last edited by danpass; 02-22-10 at 20:14.
Hmmm... I can't find a black ACS stock in stock. Maybe dying a foilage green black will work?
I doubt black would work very well.
My brother saw Deliverance and bought a Bow. I saw Deliverance and bought an AR-15.
cool!
i remember guys used to dye nylon RC car parts. the stuff was generally white nylon back in the early 90's when i was into that stuff. supposedly the boiling process made the nylon "stronger" too. i have some doubts on that.
You can use RIT to dye natural color G-10 for things like knives. Best to make it black as black tends to work best on G-10, but for FRN, especially white Sprint Run Spydercos you can use the whole range of RIT and get some really neat colors.
Two broken Tigers, on fire in the night,
Flicker their souls to the wind...
-Roads to Moscow
Not Forgotten:
http://www.virtualwall.org/dk/KillenJD01a.htm
http://www.virtualwall.org/db/BoddenTR01a.htm
I wonder if windows would become tinted, but still usable
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