Monokote help provided!
Wayne Galligan
wgalligan at goodsonacura.com
Thu Mar 18 05:02:41 AKST 2004
I will second that on the Century 21 iron. Has the a nice smooth curve in
the shoe and the temp is nice and even.
I use old cotton shirts to make the shoe protector. The best I found so
far is a real soft cotton turtleneck that I bought for $12. Washed it once
to soften it up a bit and then cut it up for use. It will make many iron
socks. I think they are about $3.50 ea. at the LHD.
Wayne G.
----- Original Message -----
From: <ronlock at comcast.net>
To: <discussion at nsrca.org>
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 7:39 AM
Subject: Re: Monokote help provided!
> The best iron I've used is the Century 21. Seems like it holds
temperature
> accurately, and shoe shape is generally convenient.
>
> Ron Lockhart
>
>
> EHaury at aol.com
> To: discussion at nsrca.org
> Subject: Re: Monokote help provided!
> Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2004 07:43:56 EST
> Some of the best MK work I've done has been with Terry's method.
>
> Unfortunately there's a variable that crept in, that being the equipment.
My old faithful heatgun gave up the ghost! Three new guns and they're all
junk. One howls like a banshee and all three deliver heat somewhere besides
where they're aimed and each at different temps. I hate buying things that
then need be rebuild / engineered for them to work properly!
>
> Irons aren't much better. As someone in this thread mentioned, most have
uneven heat distribution over the sole. Some have a broad temp range for a
given setting. The low cost types with the bi-metal control are usually the
widest. I've had one with a solid state temp control fail high and flame a
sock within seconds. All in all a wide variation in performance of the usual
MK application equipment.
>
> I suspect that those with good equipment have good experiences with MK and
vice versa. If you're lucky enough to be the former, be wary if you replace
equipment.
>
> Earl
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