Water based house paint won't melt it.
How did you get styrofoam to not melt from painting it?
How did you get styrofoam to not melt from painting it?
OK here is where all that stuff NO ONE ever thought to teach girls back when I was growing up shows up really well.Water based house paint won't melt it.
I think T.B. is talking about (exterior) latex house paint (sold at lowes and HD).
What the heck , its cheap enough, to be worth a try.I think T.B. is talking about (exterior) latex house paint (sold at lowes and HD).
Even cheaper, ask HD about their OOPS section in paint. It's usually colors that didn't quite match what the customer wanted, so they sell it at a discount.What the heck , its cheap enough, to be worth a try.
Ta=hanks when i get that far I'll check it out. walmart as well. I hear they do discounts for oops .Even cheaper, ask HD about their OOPS section in paint. It's usually colors that didn't quite match what the customer wanted, so they sell it at a discount.
How did you get styrofoam to not melt from painting it?
What the heck , its cheap enough, to be worth a try.
I get the "needs to swivel freely" part, but the fact that there's -so- much play in that bolt still concerns me. It's not rigid to the axis of the boom, either - there's about 10-20* of off-center play on that bolt as well as the free spinning issue. I would think in a part that can experience such shock loads, this would be a bad idea.
But barring perfect knowledge of the design, it's impossible for me to say.
And btw, it's a '72 V22, non-poptop, hull number 637 I think, if I read the holes right yesterday. It was an awkward stretch.