18 June 2022, 18:39
Jim@IMRepsThinning out Jarrows Inletting black
Would appreciate any recommendations on what is a good thinning agent for Jarrows Inletting Black, not sure what to use.
18 June 2022, 19:09
Phil McFallI put a dab of Jarrows on a sponge in a dish then pour a little motor oil on top and smear it around. Then I use a brush to dab on top of the sponge then to the part being inletted.
Phil
I use it as is but put it on very sparingly. I use an acid brush and spread it on the metal just enough to give a mark, if you put it on thicker you get a lot of false contact points.
19 June 2022, 05:18
BobsterJust buy a tube of black artists oil color. Mix it 50:50 with petroleum jelly. Cheap, won't get thick. Lasts forever.
19 June 2022, 05:49
Phil McFallI am just copying what I saw inletters do at Bishop and Fajen years ago. Figured they knew more than I did (everyone else does)

Phil
19 June 2022, 18:21
Jim KobeBirchwood Casey makes a synthetic oil that I use, however it does seem to "dry out" some. Sone type of oil any way
19 June 2022, 18:49
bigbullNever had to thin it yet but I would be inclined to try something like mineral oil.
BB
06 July 2022, 16:15
Lester BrooksI have used a Zippo lighter for years and it works fine without the oil with a smoke base. A candle will work just as well and cheap to buy. Smoke was used and might still be used be people scaping to true up old machines. Why waste your money on something you probably have in the shop.
06 July 2022, 17:25
Jim@IMRepsI had a can of low odor mineral spirits on hand and it worked out fine. Got a nice thin layer on the metal, which in turn prevented getting a false reading and removing too much wood, kind of a now I get it moment for this amateur.
06 July 2022, 19:48
ssdaveI use a few drops of lighter fluid dropped in to thin it; put it on in a thin layer using a q-tip.