had you down as a pearly king for a moment there.The conductive stuff I use is mostly for repairing bad buttons (like TV remotes ...)
True, thanks - looked here because the first mention I found in a thread was re. WH40KA quirky introduction post to be sure, but welcome! What purpose did you have in mind (presumably not circuits if a spray is acceptable) as most conductive coatings are targeted at the antistatic market. You could try contacting TBA in Rochdale as they do that kind of thing. Also I wonder if a model railway forum might be a better bet since there is more electricity involved day to day than in the wargaming arena!
I've seen more modern (generally plastic) 40K minis with LED illumination hacked into them, although I think in general that's done with the very small grain of sand type LEDs on enamelled wires - you can by those fairly cheaply these days either from model railway suppliers or even from Amazon. I assume they either glue the wires on the outside and blend them in or drill holes through to the weapon/eyes/whatever they want illuminating and run the cable that way. If you are trying to wire something up I would imagine it would be much more successful than trying to lay down a conductive track of transparent paint as the wires really are teeny.
As Manic mentioned there are conductive paints for circuit repair, for instance: https://uk.farnell.com/c/chemicals-adhesives/paints-coatings?coating-type=conductive but I doubt many of those are transparent.
I did just look and found a couple of options that as I suspected from some past work would be in the Anti-Static market: https://www.tbaps.com/products/coatings/conductive-transparent-graphene-hybrid-paint.html and https://hollandshielding.com/en/conductive-translucent-paint how successful either might be if you want a proper circuit I don't know, they are really just aimed at avoiding a static buildup on things like the acrylic on lights in environments where there is an explosive risk. I often find these companies are quite friendly when you get in touch however so probably worth an email explaining what you've got in mind - still curious myself to be honest!
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.