I'm just getting back into building model aircraft after best part of two decades of inactivity - job, pre-school kids, you know the score! I decided to start off with an aerosol can primer and now find myself needing, wanting, a full fledged airbrush for the 'real' paint.
Pretty much decided on a compressor - the AS189 - but I need advice on the airbrush itself.
The kits I'm making range from small - 1/72 Bell X-1, about 4" length - to quite large - 1/72 XB-70 and XB-35, both a couple of square feet in area. I'm also shortly to start other 'unusual' aircraft of medium size such as the Avro Canada CF-105, BAC TSR-2 and Fairey Rotodyne. A feature of these aircraft is that most involve painting large areas a single colour, as is the case with many prototype designs, as well as small areas of greater detail and colour variation.
The brush I've been looking at is a Spraymaster ABR1005, or similar, which quote a spray pattern about 1 1/2 inches across.
Is this enough for painting 'large' expanses of wing in the same colour, as well as finer detail. I just don't know whether 1 1/2 inches is considered 'normal' for this sort of job, or whether I need to consider a spray gun rather than airbrush. Would the compressor I'm keen on be suitable for a spray gun? I can't afford to buy a room full of kit, just an airbrush, perhaps a spray gun, and one compressor.
Gravity feed? Suction feed? Internal mix? External mix? Single action? Dual action? Not really sure what would suit my needs.
I intend to work with acrylic paints - I just prefer working with them - both from Tamiya and Revell.
Any advice would be most welcome. My local model shop has been of little help thus far, and in any case does not stock an extensive range of airbrush products.
Pretty much decided on a compressor - the AS189 - but I need advice on the airbrush itself.
The kits I'm making range from small - 1/72 Bell X-1, about 4" length - to quite large - 1/72 XB-70 and XB-35, both a couple of square feet in area. I'm also shortly to start other 'unusual' aircraft of medium size such as the Avro Canada CF-105, BAC TSR-2 and Fairey Rotodyne. A feature of these aircraft is that most involve painting large areas a single colour, as is the case with many prototype designs, as well as small areas of greater detail and colour variation.
The brush I've been looking at is a Spraymaster ABR1005, or similar, which quote a spray pattern about 1 1/2 inches across.
Is this enough for painting 'large' expanses of wing in the same colour, as well as finer detail. I just don't know whether 1 1/2 inches is considered 'normal' for this sort of job, or whether I need to consider a spray gun rather than airbrush. Would the compressor I'm keen on be suitable for a spray gun? I can't afford to buy a room full of kit, just an airbrush, perhaps a spray gun, and one compressor.
Gravity feed? Suction feed? Internal mix? External mix? Single action? Dual action? Not really sure what would suit my needs.
I intend to work with acrylic paints - I just prefer working with them - both from Tamiya and Revell.
Any advice would be most welcome. My local model shop has been of little help thus far, and in any case does not stock an extensive range of airbrush products.
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