Airbrush Paint for Plastics
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
nw-modeling-list at nwhs.org
Sun Aug 8 21:11:26 EDT 2004
At 06:11 PM 8/2/2004, you wrote:
>Painters,
>
>While I'm not new to modeling or painting, I am new to air brushing.
>Could you as a veteran recommend a brand of paints and thinner for a
>novice?
I like the "safety" of water based paints, like ModelFlex. Old water based
paints were thick and clogged or sputtered a lot, but the newer ones seem
to work fine. I use the airbrush thinner for water based paints if I use
any thinner at all. With ModelFlex, I just put a strainer on the end of
the siphon (or pass the paint through a panty hose if I use the siphon cup)
and it works fine right from the bottle. You do want to use an airbrush
medium though for thinning rather than water.
>How about a brand of air brush? I'm thinking about starting with a single
>action brush. Comments?
I've heard others who liked the Aztek, but personally, I couldn't stand
mine. I spent a lot of money on $10 tips trying to get one that would work
(kept getting bigger and bigger nozzles in tips with hope of less problems
with clogging). When it did clog, it was a paint to clean up (being a one
piece body). I soaked the thing in thinner because it said it was
indestructible and because so much paint had clogged it. It developed pits
in the metal rims and the adjustment wheel. I finally just junked it.
I've been using a Paasche H (single action) and a VL (double action) for
over 4 years each now and I like them both very much. Easy to clean. Easy
to work. I've used then with water and organic solvent based paints with
ease. I have a #3 and a #5 tip and they seem to be all I need (unless I
was going to be doing some really fancy weathering...but then I've heard
about just going without the cap to really get a fine spray and most of the
time I use washes and a small bristle brush for details).
I've heard good things about Badger, Binks and other air brushes, but I've
liked the Paasche's I bought that I saw no reason to pay $ just to try a
different one.
BTW, I don't think the airbrush matters whether you're painting plastics,
paperboard, foam, wood or metal. It's more about the paint and the
technique. I suggest a good airbrush basics book (there's one by Kalmbach
and MR author Jeff Wilson that covers the basics very well).
Hope this helps.
Dave Bott
Since this isn't about N&W history, I was going to send off list, but can't
find a personal email address to do it. Send me an email off list if you
want to discuss more. david.m.bott at dartmouth.edu
___________________________________________________
David Bott david.m.bott at dartmouth.edu
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