Robert P
TreeHouser
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2014
- Messages
- 399
Ever dyed a sun-faded housing of an Echo saw back to its original state?
Strictly for eye-appeal cosmetic reasons. I've sanded the top cover with varying grits of sandpaper and hit it with a boiled linseed oil/paint thinner treatment. It gets rid of the white/oxidized layer but is a much duller orange than the original orange - it's obviously been altered by sun exposure. Sanding off enough to get to where the pigment hasn't been altered would take a stupid amount of time and remove a lot of plastic which I'm sure would compromise structural integrity. A plastic dye would seem to be the way to go - Rit Dyemore is specifically formulated for plastics and is inexpensive though there are other kinds of dyes like procion dyes. Ever found a formulation that's really close to or an exact match for the Echo color?
Strictly for eye-appeal cosmetic reasons. I've sanded the top cover with varying grits of sandpaper and hit it with a boiled linseed oil/paint thinner treatment. It gets rid of the white/oxidized layer but is a much duller orange than the original orange - it's obviously been altered by sun exposure. Sanding off enough to get to where the pigment hasn't been altered would take a stupid amount of time and remove a lot of plastic which I'm sure would compromise structural integrity. A plastic dye would seem to be the way to go - Rit Dyemore is specifically formulated for plastics and is inexpensive though there are other kinds of dyes like procion dyes. Ever found a formulation that's really close to or an exact match for the Echo color?