by kittyfritters » Sun Mar 01, 2015 11:44 pm
Butyrate dope does shrink the covering but it DOES NOT have shrink without limit. It does get brittle from age and exposure to UV over the years, but you probably won't fly a model that long, at least without recovering it at some point. You always use butyrate dope on an IC engine powered model since it is fuel proof.
NITRATE dope has the continuous shrinking problem, over a long period of time, unless plasticized. Nitrate dope is used on rubber powered, CO2 powered, and electric powered models where exposure to fuel is not an issue. I haven't used nitrate dope in about 30 years so I don't know if the newer formulations have a plasticizer. There have been fuel proof coatings to cover nitrate dope, but I haven't seen any advertised for years.
I have been using Krylon fixative or Armstrong Shine Keeper, both acrylic products, on my models since I started building again in 2004 because of their lower toxicity and odor. That is unless it is a seaplane or a flying boat, since the acrylic products are water resistant, not waterproof. If you need real waterproof you need to use dope. (Although I did have a model that had the tissue fixed with krylon and painted with acrylic ink get caught in a sudden rain storm while flying without any damage after it dried.)
With any tissue or cloth covering, you have to shrink the covering tight before applying a fixative, dope or Krylon. The fixative, in spite of it's ability to shrink the covering, just makes sure it stays tight, fills the grain to make the covering air tight, and provides a base coat for color. Dope won't rescue a sagging covering job.