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Removable
"Poured" dentures
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<blockquote data-quote="AJEL" data-source="post: 40149" data-attributes="member: 1480"><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'">I have been using pour for 80% of my work, the Fircke is one of the better pour materials but GC <a href="http://www.gcamerica.com/lab/products/NATURE-CRYL_POUR/index.phpis" target="_blank">http://www.gcamerica.com/lab/products/NATURE-CRYL_POUR/index.phpis</a> a great material as well , I use Pour Plus from <a href="http://www.denplus.com/catalog/index.php?cPath=1057_1058" target="_blank">Denplus - DenPlus - Membres</a> as it is the most color stable. I use Perform from <a href="http://www.garreco.com/Garreco%20rotary.pdf" target="_blank">http://www.garreco.com/Garreco rotary.pdf</a> as my second choice. I use a flask from Gareco that utalizes the model being held in plaster with the hydrocoloid holding the teeth. I agree that making your waxup super clean & sharp is paramont, the reason I like a red wax during a final waxup in this forum.</span></strong></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'">You will be soaking the model prior to using hydrocoloid, take a towel & make sure around the teeth is bubble free, reduces those little balls between the teeth (and gives you one extra check for wax on the occlusion). When flasking a partial and having a single tooth use a silicone matrix around it and when reinserting the case in the hydrocoloid you shan't knock the tooth loose (pink tooth). </span></strong></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'">Watch your temperature in the pressure curing unit, Denplus & Perform (Hedent in EU) are more temperature dependent. Using a Dimetharylaate ethylene glycol as an activator rather than the Polymethacrylate-tert-Amyl commonly utilized. It is an ISO 9001:2000 CE material. using less Polymethacrylate-tert-Amyl means the yellow or brown that can occur with Fricke or Densply is avoided as well as (Amyl sensitivities, Amyl is also the activation in many heat cure materials.)</span></strong></span></p><p> <span style="font-size: 12px"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'">Resist using to much monomier. Don't cut the time short, and watch your temperature ea mfg has specific time/temp and best results need you to follow them. Dental Guy mentions bonding and roughing, I do that with all teeth all systems just don't trust I guess. </span></strong></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><strong><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'">Yesterday I relined a Perform denture I did in 1989 and after pumice & polish the acrylic color still matched. If you trim a denture tooth pretty thin it is rather easy to place a tooth colored dab under the tooth before closing the flask and having a solid tooth color under one of those shells, including around implant or attachments, and with the fluid resin system I haven't bent an implant bar as can happen with injection & press pack. IMHO</span></strong></span></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="AJEL, post: 40149, member: 1480"] [SIZE="3"][B][FONT="Book Antiqua"]I have been using pour for 80% of my work, the Fircke is one of the better pour materials but GC [url]http://www.gcamerica.com/lab/products/NATURE-CRYL_POUR/index.phpis[/url] a great material as well , I use Pour Plus from [url=http://www.denplus.com/catalog/index.php?cPath=1057_1058]Denplus - DenPlus - Membres[/url] as it is the most color stable. I use Perform from [url]http://www.garreco.com/Garreco%20rotary.pdf[/url] as my second choice. I use a flask from Gareco that utalizes the model being held in plaster with the hydrocoloid holding the teeth. I agree that making your waxup super clean & sharp is paramont, the reason I like a red wax during a final waxup in this forum. You will be soaking the model prior to using hydrocoloid, take a towel & make sure around the teeth is bubble free, reduces those little balls between the teeth (and gives you one extra check for wax on the occlusion). When flasking a partial and having a single tooth use a silicone matrix around it and when reinserting the case in the hydrocoloid you shan't knock the tooth loose (pink tooth). Watch your temperature in the pressure curing unit, Denplus & Perform (Hedent in EU) are more temperature dependent. Using a Dimetharylaate ethylene glycol as an activator rather than the Polymethacrylate-tert-Amyl commonly utilized. It is an ISO 9001:2000 CE material. using less Polymethacrylate-tert-Amyl means the yellow or brown that can occur with Fricke or Densply is avoided as well as (Amyl sensitivities, Amyl is also the activation in many heat cure materials.) Resist using to much monomier. Don't cut the time short, and watch your temperature ea mfg has specific time/temp and best results need you to follow them. Dental Guy mentions bonding and roughing, I do that with all teeth all systems just don't trust I guess. Yesterday I relined a Perform denture I did in 1989 and after pumice & polish the acrylic color still matched. If you trim a denture tooth pretty thin it is rather easy to place a tooth colored dab under the tooth before closing the flask and having a solid tooth color under one of those shells, including around implant or attachments, and with the fluid resin system I haven't bent an implant bar as can happen with injection & press pack. IMHO[/FONT][/B][/SIZE] [/QUOTE]
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