My foot is in the door! WooHoo!!! Was waiting to get a little cheapy/2nd hand toast oven to get hard cured heads before i bought paint, but my wife surprised me with a brand new toaster oven for my birthday on friday. Told her it was way too fancy to ruin by baking lead in... then said THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
Saturday afternoon took a road trip to Toledo - Janns Netcraft! Ended up with white, red, yellow, blue, watermellon & clear... black was out of stock. Painted a few today - pretty slick stuff.
Questions, questions.....
1st Step - Heat Source: With out taking a trip to the store to make an alcohol burner like was posted here, my best bet was a cig lighter. 1st 1/16th oz. head i tried, melted 90% of the lead off the hook - plop - oops! - hot lead!!! Did have a heating pad on the desk though. 2nd head i heated less and dippedin white, but tried to re-heat after i noticed i missed a spot. Guess it got too hot because the paint started bubbling/smoking and turned brown... fudge-a-roo #2. :dodgy: Cussed a little.... scratched my head... then looked at my fancy new jig oven. :idea: Quick read through my Jann's catalog mentioned that the metal has to be 350 degs. for powder to stick. SO, set the oven to 400, hung a few jigs on the rack and set the timer for 15 mins. Watched through the window as the lead turned shiny.
Ding! Pulled one out with forceps and dip. Eureka! Back in the oven at 350 for 15 mins. to cure and it glossed over smooth as goose sh!t thru a screen door in the process. :beer:
1st couple questions... there will be more to come.
If i have read right, lead melts at around 600 degs. Farenheit or so, correct? I should have no problem with lead melting even on small 1/80-1/64 heads if i keep the temp around 400 right? Does 400 degs. mess with the hook any.... make it brittle?
Why have i never heard of anyone using a toast oven to heat the jig before painting? I CAN NOT be the first. Seemed to work ok and was even able to tap some color on a few to add multi-color after a short re-heat in the oven.
I will post some pics soon of my progress into this.

Questions, questions.....

1st Step - Heat Source: With out taking a trip to the store to make an alcohol burner like was posted here, my best bet was a cig lighter. 1st 1/16th oz. head i tried, melted 90% of the lead off the hook - plop - oops! - hot lead!!! Did have a heating pad on the desk though. 2nd head i heated less and dippedin white, but tried to re-heat after i noticed i missed a spot. Guess it got too hot because the paint started bubbling/smoking and turned brown... fudge-a-roo #2. :dodgy: Cussed a little.... scratched my head... then looked at my fancy new jig oven. :idea: Quick read through my Jann's catalog mentioned that the metal has to be 350 degs. for powder to stick. SO, set the oven to 400, hung a few jigs on the rack and set the timer for 15 mins. Watched through the window as the lead turned shiny.

1st couple questions... there will be more to come.
If i have read right, lead melts at around 600 degs. Farenheit or so, correct? I should have no problem with lead melting even on small 1/80-1/64 heads if i keep the temp around 400 right? Does 400 degs. mess with the hook any.... make it brittle?
Why have i never heard of anyone using a toast oven to heat the jig before painting? I CAN NOT be the first. Seemed to work ok and was even able to tap some color on a few to add multi-color after a short re-heat in the oven.
I will post some pics soon of my progress into this.