✨ Light Up Your Life with Glow-On! 🌌
Glow-On Original is a professional-grade, water-based glow-in-the-dark paint available in a compact 2.3 ml vial. Designed for versatile use, it features a bright yellowish-white day color and a vibrant green glow, making it ideal for applications like gun sights, models, and various DIY projects. The paint is easy to apply, comes with a wooden applicator, and is rechargeable with natural or LED light, ensuring long-lasting luminescence.
Brand | Glow-On Super phosphorescent |
Color | Original: Yellowish white day color/ Green glow. |
Finish Type | Matte |
Size | Small 2.3 ml vial |
Item Volume | 3 Milliliters |
Special Feature | Glow |
Paint Type | Acrylic |
Specific Uses For Product | Nighttime hunting, shooting range activities |
Surface Recommendation | Multi-Surface |
Indoor/Outdoor Usage | Indoor |
Item Form | Liquid |
Included Components | One 2.3ml vial with glow-on Super Phosphorescent, one instructions sheet, one small wooden applicator |
Age Range (Description) | Adult |
Is Waterproof | False |
Model Name | Glow-On Original |
Package Information | Tube |
Color Code | #FFFFE0 |
Coverage | Opaque |
Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
UPC | 608866296348 |
Manufacturer | GLOW-ON SUPER PHOSPHORESCENT |
Part Number | 001 |
Item model number | 001 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Style | Glow-in-the-dark Gun Sights |
Finish | Matte |
Material | Glow-in-the-dark pigment |
Mounting Type | Wall Mount |
Special Features | Glow |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
H**E
Amazing product buy now for gun sights
Visibility is great after a flashlight blast. Still visible in the dark on its own but not as great. In the picture is the original paint on my 1911 on the left and on the right is my ruger security 9 with HI VIZ $100 night sights on the back and the green paint color on the front sight. Nearly no difference (this is after flashlight blast for 1 second with iPhone which HI VIZ sights don’t need bust still) Original paint is the best. Green is still pretty good but not as bright without a flashlight blast. I’d recommend doing on gun sights with dot iron sights that divot down so it’s easy to drop in a speck. Get fine detail brushed for like $8 to make it super easy. It washes off with water or rubbing it after a second or 2 but when dry for a while is permanent as the top of container. Doing this on all my guns without night sights right away. Too easy
H**Y
Awesome phosphorus night sight paint
Awesome product. Worked as advertised. The bottle was even smaller than I had expected. I used a toothpick to put drops on sights. It took a few applications. Came out perfectly, but you must be careful. After it dried, I used a clear acrylic nail polish to seal it.
T**S
It works!
I got this for my firearms with regular iron sights. It for sure is good and bright when charged, and stays lit for a good amount of time. My biggest issue was getting it to applicate smoothly so it didn't look all sloppy. Then I had issues with getting enough where I needed it without it drying up too quickly and pulling off (Was applying to a derringer in this case). Then it looked as though it had something messing up the surface creating dark spots. In the end I can say it does exactly when it is supposed to do and it works well, you just have to be very very on point when applying it and do it quickly. Just wish you would get more for the price, but you will have enough for plenty of firearms even with the smallest vial. It's almost adorable how tiny it is.
J**.
When you need it, it won't work. Interesting stuff.
Interesting stuff. Be sure to put a drop of water in it before painting. First thoughts are that it won't work when you need it most. If you have it next to your bed in a drawer, like I do, and you pull it out in the dark, the paint won't be glowing. You need light to charge them and if you have light then you don't need the glow. BUT I find they help with target acquisition in any light however no more than if I just used white paint. This paint is NOT white so I recommend putting some white paint in the areas you are going to want to glow. I used a Rustoleum flat enamel. Some people say they use white out with good results.The first few coats of Glow-on I applied I did not put a drop of water in it --- a single drop of water is plenty because the bottle is tiny. It's more than enough paint but the bottle is half the size of your thumb. Anyhow, the first coats I put on without adding water and it dried lumpy. The paint is gritty so it when it's not diluted it will lump up. When I painted I had a black light right next to me so I could see every little spec of the stuff and remove what I didn't want with the over-sized toothpick they give you. Works great. I think I over painted some of the rear sights; on a few, if the pistol is pointed at the ground you can see the glow from the top, just a rookie error in painting, I only want the glow to be seen from the rear. I put it on a Sig 2022 with great results. A Ruger GP100 with decent results. Rear sight is great but I painted the front sight too far down. A Khar CW9 with nice results. And a RIA compact 1911 with very nice results. Works great on the front sights that are a small circle like on the Sig and Khar. Plus those type of sights generally have the white paint already on there to paint over.I have a tiny little blacklight flashlight that I got here on Amazon. If I feel I have the time I can point it at the sights for litterally 3-5 seconds and it will glow bright for the time it would take to deal with an intruder. The black light charges it quick and wont give away you position say if you're in a room. If I don't have time to use the light or fear the noise of the flashlight button then.. you go at it without the glow.Truth be told, if I am fairly certain someone is in my house I'm not wasting a second to charge the paint. And as far as I can tell it's completely useless without some kind of charge. But with a charge it glows bright for a long time. I'll probably use it more on emergency flashlights and things like that, even for stars on my daughters ceiling.As initially stated, interesting stuff. Good price, and it really glows bright with a charge. It could be perfect for certain situations but not really for the reason I bought it witch if for home defense at night with little to no light.Cover with a few coats of clear nail polish overlapping the edge of the Glow-on.
A**D
Not Just for Sights: Used for Color Fill Project on AR-15 Lower
Despite the fact that two of these micro little bottles of glow paint cost me $27.15 (shipped) it’s worth it. *That's about $39,528.41 per gallon. (But who's counting) I gave the paint 5 stars on value for money because of how well it works, despite being ultra-expensive. The properties of the paint aren’t as easy to work with as modeling Enamel but I was able to get it to work. The last picture shows the intense GLOW right after charging with a bright flashlight (picture taken in dark) The intense glow only last about a minute or so, (almost looks radioactive) but in the dark it glows enough for you to see if for a long time. (Only tested out to 15 minutes, but probably can be seen much longer than that) And that was after only a 10 second charge with a bright flashlight.Also I found using a 0000 brush helps not to waste paint. If you plan on doing more than a few AR Lowers, I would get the next larger size. (vs the 2.3ml I got) I was worried that there would be so little of the paint in the engraved part of the lower it wouldn't glow that well or last that long but that was not the case with this super quality paint. I added a number of pictures, including some zooms. Hope this helps & give you ideas for projects of your own.Super happy with the results, (better than I expected) this is one of the few of my projects I would give an A+
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