by kittyfritters » Thu Mar 10, 2011 10:43 am
Tip from the "covered wagon days"...a drop of castor oil mixed into an ounce of nitrate dope will plasticize the dope and keep it from shrinking the tissue forever. Yes, if you keep a straight nitrate doped model for a long time you will find it gets very brittle since the tissue never stops shrinking.
I don't use dope at all since my wife is very allergic to the fumes, even if it is out in the garage. I fix my tissue with Krylon Crystal Clear fixative. Use #1303, gloss, #1305, UV resistant gloss, or #1311 matte on tissue. The #1305 seems to fill better on silkspan. These are acrylic fixatives and can be painted with acrylic paints or acrylic airbrush inks. Krylon does have a very slight taughtening effect on tissue as it dries.
Aside from the lower chemical signature the main difference between Krylon fixative and dope is that the Krylon is water-resistant, not waterproof. If you are building a real seaplane, use dope. Kryloned tissue will sag on a dewy morning but tightens back up as the humidity goes down. Acrylic paints or inks carry a very large load of water so the tissue will also sag alarmingly when sprayed, but it will tighten right back up as it dries.
I have seven year old models done with Krylon that are still flyable.