Hi Gary,
Good to know and I have a Walmart in town. I just may stash some of that cleaner. I thought about the brake cleaner too. But yours may be a little more gentle.
The issue I have to is that I cannot dunk the figure, he has a hat which I like what I have done so far.
I am ready to have a go at it now to see which way or what I will use.
Will keep you guys posted.
Many thanks to all of you
Dee
I'm a SuperClean apostle, too, as you all can see from my posts here in the Planet (and elsewhere).
Regarding removing paint from a specific spot with SC, you can do that, too. I have done so, applying the liquid with a paint brush to the area I wanted to strip. Here are some pics I took of the piece in progress, Gertie from Scale 120, for the Maschinen Krieger series. I gave her a black eye, as I tried to paint her face:
Rather than strip the whole figure and start over, I applied SC to her eyes and the surrounding area, with a fine brush, removing the paint down to the primer:
That took a couple of minutes. Then later (much later!) I went back and finished her face:
Besides the advantages we've mentioned so far, I'll add that it's a bargain, at around eight bucks a gallon at WalMart. You can find it at Autozone, too, apparently. And, it's even more of a bargain, because you can use batches of SC over and over. I use glass jars of various sizes, depending on the size of the piece. It strips enamels, oils, acrylics, from styrene, resin and metal, with no harm to the piece. The paint will soften and dissolve into the solution. I usually give a piece a soak of 5 minutes or so, before a first pass to scrub the paint away gently with an old toothbrush. You can soak it longer, of course.
It also has household uses, to clean grease stains, for example, or even unclog drains.
So, I recommend it!
Prost!
Brad