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Thread: Never had this failure before.

  1. #1
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    Default Never had this failure before.


    I haven't been Powder Painting jig heads long, but had a strange one today.
    I was baking some of the odd jigs I had around after PPing and had three of them do this.

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    It looks like the head melted off the hook. One of the heads is in the picture while the other two are firmly stuck to the bottom of my oven rack.
    It appears as if maybe the heads were not lead but perhaps plastic.
    Clint
    Far West Kentucky
    http://www.crappie.com/crappie/signaturepics/sigpic31827_3.gif
    Old enough to know better and way too old to care!

  2. #2
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    Clint if you want to make sure cover the piece in the middle with a towel and smack it with a hammer - if lead it should flatten right out if plastic it will shatter.

    Were the heads plain when you coated them?? or coated with another paint??
    Was it a regular oven or toaster oven?? Either one - Make sure to get yourself an in oven thermometer - $3-4 at Walmart, Target .... and check your temps.

    Never had this one happen before!!! I melted a few off the hook when I was first learning how to use the heat gun for powder painting but never in the oven.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fatman View Post
    Clint if you want to make sure cover the piece in the middle with a towel and smack it with a hammer - if lead it should flatten right out if plastic it will shatter.
    I put the one in the picture in a big pair of pliers and squeezed. It is some sort of metal as it deformed like lead but with less resistance.

    Quote Originally Posted by Fatman View Post

    Were the heads plain when you coated them?? or coated with another paint??
    They had a grey finish that APPEARED to be lead.

    Quote Originally Posted by Fatman View Post
    Was it a regular oven or toaster oven?? Either one - Make sure to get yourself an in oven thermometer - $3-4 at Walmart, Target .... and check your temps.
    I use a toaster oven and have a thermometer. Read 350º as is always does.


    Quote Originally Posted by Fatman View Post
    Never had this one happen before!!! I melted a few off the hook when I was first learning how to use the heat gun for powder painting but never in the oven.
    I have progressively used less and less time over the heat gun. My first few batches had as much paint as they did lead.
    Clint
    Far West Kentucky
    http://www.crappie.com/crappie/signaturepics/sigpic31827_3.gif
    Old enough to know better and way too old to care!

  4. #4
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    Clint got me at a loss!!! Hope that was all you had left of those heads!!! Gonna have to do some digging around trying to figure this one out. Wouldn't think tin, maybe some type of solder.

  5. #5
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    maybe it was indium? a filer metal that is used to lower the melting point of lead ... here is a example of melting temps..
    just found this doing a search of low temp solders...

    Bismuth melts at 519.8° F (271.3° C).
    Tin melts at 447.8° F (231.8° C).
    Lead melts at 620.6° F (327.5° C).
    Indium melts at 312.8° F (156.6° C).



  6. #6
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    Clint I think it is pewter mixed in with some lead.
    Life is Good !
    2018 Kentucky & Tennessee Crappie Masters State Champs!

  7. #7
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    The three that melted were the only ones I had of that jig, so it’s not likely to happen again. But I have been thinking. I throw light jigs 1/16th and 1/32nds oz. and often I wish I had a jig of those weights but with a bigger head for a larger profile. Does anyone make a jig of a lighter metal or plastic that would be the size of a 1/8th oz.? I like the slow sink rate of the lighter jigs but would like one that presented a larger cross-section perhaps to attract more attention.
    Clint
    Far West Kentucky
    http://www.crappie.com/crappie/signaturepics/sigpic31827_3.gif
    Old enough to know better and way too old to care!

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