‘Fascinating and surprising!
I have usually found conductive paints etc go the other way - no conductivity until dry! this aniline black is quite a weird compound though - do you know what the solvent for the paint is? Is it a situation where the solvent and the dry substance form a different compound when mixed?
Is there any measurable conductance on the dry aniline black?’ – Fred
Fred, these were quite crude tests, I stuck a pair of electrodes into a capful of the paint, as it was out of the tube, and it conducted, as it did just after I spread it over an area of about 12x6” paper. When it was dry, it no longer gave a reading on my trusted DMM (i.e. open or very high resistance).
The paint is in aqueous solvent so it’s either a water or alcohol suspension.
Strangely, if my original idea holds, this would suit these findings and also the ones with which you are more familiar. Strange really.
‘The solid material is filtered through cotton and spun in a centrifuge to remove bark and other contaminants. The product at this stage is suitable for use as a base coat, but must be further refined to be used for middle and final coats. Iron powder is then added to tint the base lacquer black or red.’
Thanks for the info on ‘black lacquer’.
I had puzzled over this after the little birdy tweeted in my ear but then spoke with a friend who is a furniture maker: he suggested that many people use the terms ‘lacquer’ and ‘French polish’ interchangeably, which made me do a little digging and I came up with this…
http://pianomaker.co.uk/technical/polishing/
If you look at points 134 & 135, Gas Black colourant is soot (a.k.a. carbon or charcoal but when used for ebonised work is augmented by aniline spirit black (there’s that stuff again!).
In 135, ‘black polish’ for use in ebonised work is a mix of white polish (light delicate hue) with aniline spirit black, this black polish is used over existing layers to impart an ebonised look.
Had another wee look around and found that ‘Liberon’ do a black French polish, as supplied by Axminster Tools ( http://www.axminster.co.uk/liberon-black-french-polish-250ml )
Might just have to put in a wee order and have a go…
N.B. (1) I have no vested interests in any of the companies mentioned above!
(2) The little birdy birdy was a reliable source.