The problem with plastidip is that it's thick and distorts the dimensions and sharp feature of the part you are trying to scan. Ideally with scanning spray you want a very light dusting.
Micr0 wrote: ↑16 Jan 2020, 01:00
The problem with plastidip is that it's thick and distorts the dimensions and sharp feature of the part you are trying to scan. Ideally with scanning spray you want a very light dusting.
I completely agree - the other day I had to scan a large semi-precious stone for the ring (it has a not quite standard shape, and it was very difficult to measure everything exactly), and due to the absence of any spray, I smeared it with a white “corrector for correction text on paper "- at least the form turned out (which I needed), and the edges are poorly visible.
kodex1717 seem to have tried some diferent ones and said about this Spotcheck SKD-S2 Developer by Magnaflux, wich surprisely is very cheap in my country. I paid 15 USD for a can. Will try it next week.
kodex1717 seem to have tried some diferent ones and said about this Spotcheck SKD-S2 Developer by Magnaflux, wich surprisely is very cheap in my country. I paid 15 USD for a can. Will try it next week.
That"s the stuff I use. Works well. don't spray it on too heavy. it's easy to think you haven't sprayed enough, spray more and realize when it dries that you oversprayed. It can be then a bit difficult to get it completely off. It tends to like to stay in the nooks and cracks.