by Humanoido » Fri Feb 22, 2008 5:50 am
by Humanoido
Fri Feb 22, 2008 5:50 am
I think one of the modeler experts could answer the paint question. For metal, they use anodizing to give color. For plastic, there's special colored enamels ideally suited. A chemical additive, such as acetone, can actually eat away and melt plastic, and some mismatched paints can cause a lasting sticky conclusion. So we'll need an expert or a brave person to try out the paint approach, - maybe on a small less conspicuous back section or a tiny area on the bottom of the i-SOBOT foot?
Another approach that can bypass the paint altogether is the use of decals. There's peel and stick, water and stick, and some talk about using the decorative sheets designed for cell phones. You can even design your own by feeding the special sheets into a computer printer. The latter could be very interesting. Someone with an artistic flair for robotics could come up with an i-SOBOT robotic designer outfit and post the file on the forum.
humanoido
I think one of the modeler experts could answer the paint question. For metal, they use anodizing to give color. For plastic, there's special colored enamels ideally suited. A chemical additive, such as acetone, can actually eat away and melt plastic, and some mismatched paints can cause a lasting sticky conclusion. So we'll need an expert or a brave person to try out the paint approach, - maybe on a small less conspicuous back section or a tiny area on the bottom of the i-SOBOT foot?
Another approach that can bypass the paint altogether is the use of decals. There's peel and stick, water and stick, and some talk about using the decorative sheets designed for cell phones. You can even design your own by feeding the special sheets into a computer printer. The latter could be very interesting. Someone with an artistic flair for robotics could come up with an i-SOBOT robotic designer outfit and post the file on the forum.
humanoido