Fresh out the oven!

DirtyCivilian

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Just got these babies back from the Cerakote shop!
Part of a build kit I'm working on.
The plan is for these and a few other goodies to go inside a white violin / ukulele / or guitar case.
Kinda a stormtrooper Glock mag fed blaster set.

PF940V2 w Florida Man Supply Omega Slide

Bear Creek Arsenal BC-9 bufferless AR9

Coated in Cerakote "Bright White"

I actually wanted to have the grip panel area on the P80 to stay black but I think the cerakote guy misunderstood me and I didn't want to wait any longer for him to re do it so I figured I might have it stippled.
It started as a factory black frame.
I'm not completely sure but I have heard that you stipple after cerakote if you want a two tone finish. The idea is that the stippling will burn off the cerakote and reveal the original frame color. I'm not 100% sure on this though. I would love to hear from anyone that has real experience with stippling over cerakoted polymer.
I tried a set of stick on HandleItGrips specifically cut for the 940V2 but they really didn't line up right at all. They did not match the factory lines or control cut outs very well at all . They looked like ass so I pulled them off and threw them away.

Any recommendations on some kind of (preferable white in color) hard case that these, some mags, a OTF knife and a set of white knuckle dusters would fit in ? I will be adding custom cut closed cell foam inside so everything has its own place cut out. I'm really leaning towards a music instrument case of some sort.

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I'm not completely sure but I have heard that you stipple after cerakote if you want a two tone finish. The idea is that the stippling will burn off the cerakote and reveal the original frame color. I'm not 100% sure on this though. I would love to hear from anyone that has real experience with stippling over cerakoted polymer.
The industry standard is cerekote first, create the border, sand off the stippled area, and the last step is stipple.
 
The industry standard is cerekote first, create the border, sand off the stippled area, and the last step is stipple.
That's what I thought. Good deal! So I'm still good. Don't think I have the nerve to try the stipple myself yet, so I'm in search of professional stippling service locally
 
Nice work. I hope they shoot better than the Stormtroopers’ blasters.
 
The industry standard is cerekote first, create the border, sand off the stippled area, and the last step is stipple.
Not to waste your time looking around, but is there a Youtube video that shows the processes you've described with the border and sanding?
 
@USApat

FB group - DIY weapon stippling

Some heavy hitters on IG...




 
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