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#1
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Since joining this forum, I have been wanting to try dyeing my discs. I finally got up the motivation to try it out a few days ago and have had, in my mind, pretty decent results for a noob.
I beg forgiveness now, for asking the following question: Why not dye Pro-D plastic? I read the sticky on which discs to dye and the only reply I have seen was along the lines of "not worth it". I know Pro-D plastic is bottom of the line, but I have a few of them and figured they would be good to practice on, and yes, I still throw them with ok results. So again I ask, why not the Pro-D? Will the dye not take? Will the heat of the water/dye solution cause warping or irreversible damage to the plastic? Will the stamp not come off? Heres an example of my early dyes... Both done on a 2012 Ace Race Disc Cheers |
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#2
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DX and pro D do not take dye very well.
__________________
May 19: A Day in May (Spotsylvania, VA) May 20: Pratt Open (Spotsylvania, VA) May 23: Darkside (Spotsylvania, VA) May 25: Southern MD Monthly Birds and the Bess. |
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#3
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thanks for the clarification!!
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#4
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In fact most all baseline plastics across the board are undyeable, or not worth the effort.
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#5
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Jeff Ash can dye base line plastic and makes it look good.
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#6
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Quote:
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#7
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On a somewhat related note, what's up with Rit dye? I heard they changed their dye so it doesn't work on plastics anymore. Is this true? And if it is, is there another dye out there that works?
__________________
Too many discs, too little space, not enough skill.
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#8
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I just did my first dyes using RIT and it seems to be holding on just fine
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#9
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#10
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I hate to sound like a total noob, but new question....
How can I remove sharpie ink? |
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