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ChilliSpoons

Applying Glonation Paint

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About Glonation paint glow times:  I bought White a couple of years ago and it said that it glowed greenish white (true) for 12 hrs after charging.  I have another jar that is white color in daylight that is labeled "Green" and is supposed to glow green for 10 hrs.  I have another jar labeled Green that also looks Green in daylight.  The website currently says that the white glows for only 10 minutes - the shortest time of any of the paints. 

 

I can't see a rhyme or reason for the confused labeling, so can only guess they have changed the formulation of various colors over the last few years, adding dye to some colors that show white in daylight but glow a different color in the dark.  You need to read up on the glow times of the various colors as published on the site right now, since that will probably be what you get.

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Yep, although a LED flashlight works better 'cause it has more intense light.  It doesn't have to be UV light.  When I coat spoons in my garage under fluorescent lighting, they glow just fine when I turn out the lights to go inside the house.

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This picture was taken in total darkness with a cell phone...look how bright those eyes glow.They were painted with one coat of Glonation unpigmented Phos Green glow paint...Nathan

 

That's some scary stuff right there!  Looks goooood!!!!

How long does it take a dot of that paint to dry/cure so you feel comfortable fishing the lure?

Does it play nice with top coats?

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Mark, Glonation is just like any other acrylic paint.  If used just for eyes, I think a few hours of drying would be enough before topcoating.  I applied Glonation twice a day on the whole lure until I got the thick even coating I wanted (4 heavy coats), then let the lure dry overnight before topcoating.  It's water based acrylic and I had no issues with topcoat.  I used Dick Nite S81 MCU, pretty touchy stuff, and it turned out fine. 

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I added some white "eyes" to some jig heads, and they do glow like crazy!  I didn't get bit, but it was a tough bite.  We fish the day after a big tournament on the same 2000 acre lake.

Since I'm home today, I played around with the white, and the red powder a little more.

I added some of the red powder to some clear nail polish I had, and coated a couple of jigs and cranks.  The red powder doesn't glow anywhere as much as the white, but it does glow, if you add enough powder.  Definitely not as strong as the white paint.

I put some of the white paint onto a couple of crackle craw painted DD22 cranks. I top coated with clear nail polish, to save time and weight.  They glow, but the regular paint is still visible in direct sunlight.  I'll use them for low light conditions.

The fish are moving up here in SoCal.  Good times ahead.

Did I mention I'm tired of deep and slow and cross your fingers fishing?

Edited by mark poulson
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