CrusherJ Posted November 3, 2009 Posted November 3, 2009 Hey, I'm new to modeling and working on my first, a 1/72 corsair, and have run into a concern/problem. I bought tamiya acrylic paint to use on the small pieces instead of spray painting them and it's very watery. It works fine for flat surfaces, but for things like the landing gear, propeller and other small, rounded parts it's hard to get it to stay because it's so watery and dripping off. Is it supposed to be this way or is there something I'm doing (or not) that's causing it? I'm storing them in my garage which gets pretty cold now, does that make a difference? Thanks! Quote
Vifam7 Posted November 3, 2009 Posted November 3, 2009 (edited) Hey, I'm new to modeling and working on my first, a 1/72 corsair, and have run into a concern/problem. I bought tamiya acrylic paint to use on the small pieces instead of spray painting them and it's very watery. It works fine for flat surfaces, but for things like the landing gear, propeller and other small, rounded parts it's hard to get it to stay because it's so watery and dripping off. Is it supposed to be this way or is there something I'm doing (or not) that's causing it? I'm storing them in my garage which gets pretty cold now, does that make a difference? Thanks! No, that's how Tamiya paint is. In order for the paint color to stick, there are 2 things you can do. 1. Prime the plastic by painting on primer paint first and/or 2. Paint multiple layers. Paint-dry-paint-dry-paint-dry... and on and on and on For lighter colors like white and yellow, you may need to put on as many as 5 or more layers. Edited November 3, 2009 by Vifam7 Quote
Noyhauser Posted November 3, 2009 Posted November 3, 2009 Hey, I'm new to modeling and working on my first, a 1/72 corsair, and have run into a concern/problem. I bought tamiya acrylic paint to use on the small pieces instead of spray painting them and it's very watery. It works fine for flat surfaces, but for things like the landing gear, propeller and other small, rounded parts it's hard to get it to stay because it's so watery and dripping off. Is it supposed to be this way or is there something I'm doing (or not) that's causing it? I'm storing them in my garage which gets pretty cold now, does that make a difference? Thanks! Couple of questions: Are you thinning it at all? Tamiya paints tend not to need too much thinner. Also make sure that shake and stir the paint well from the paint pot before you use it. It tends to separate and the paint accumulates at the bottom. By the way, are you building the Tamiya corsair? Its an absolutely gorgeous kit (I'm building one right now too) Quote
CrusherJ Posted November 3, 2009 Author Posted November 3, 2009 I see, thanks guys, I'll try those suggestions. I'm building the Hobby Base corsair since it was $13 cheaper than the Tamiya one. I'm going to try that one next though, may get the 1/48 version since it's virually the same price as the 1/72 one at LHS. Quote
Noyhauser Posted November 3, 2009 Posted November 3, 2009 I see, thanks guys, I'll try those suggestions. I'm building the Hobby Base corsair since it was $13 cheaper than the Tamiya one. I'm going to try that one next though, may get the 1/48 version since it's virually the same price as the 1/72 one at LHS. Both are spectacular kits, easily the best in their respective scales. Quote
David Hingtgen Posted November 3, 2009 Posted November 3, 2009 I've never had paint THAT thin that it'd actually flow around to the underside of a round part, unless it was totally unstirred. Are you STIRRING the paint? Shaking does nothing for acrylics--you can shake all day, and it'll still be 90% unmixed, even if the color looks right. I'd suspect the cold garage at least partly---cold makes many things separate to the point that it takes MUCH more effort for them to mix again---they don't really mix, they just suspend themselves in much smaller particles, so they LOOK mixed, but aren't really. Quote
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