Advice on an airbrush for Airfix kit
Discussion
Hi
I have been clearing out the loft and came across an Airfix kit of a Boeing 747 I purchased from a charity shop some time ago (I was passing and saw it in the window and decided that £2.50 was worth the gamble). I need to buy an airbrush, but given it will be a one off I don't want to spend a lot, and would be grateful for some advice on a budget airbrush that will give an acceptable finish. Despite working in a RC model shop for a few years when I was much young, the last time I painted an airfix kit was when I was 12 and that was with a brush!
Cheers
Tim
PS Will update with build pictures.
I have been clearing out the loft and came across an Airfix kit of a Boeing 747 I purchased from a charity shop some time ago (I was passing and saw it in the window and decided that £2.50 was worth the gamble). I need to buy an airbrush, but given it will be a one off I don't want to spend a lot, and would be grateful for some advice on a budget airbrush that will give an acceptable finish. Despite working in a RC model shop for a few years when I was much young, the last time I painted an airfix kit was when I was 12 and that was with a brush!
Cheers
Tim
PS Will update with build pictures.
Have a look on eBay. You can get a cheap compressor and brush for about £70 that will do the job.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/152181081549?lpid=1...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/like/152181081549?lpid=1...
If its just a one off I would be going with the aerosols route as suggested.
I use the Halfords aerosols to paint model trucks as they are cheaper and better choice of colours rather than using model paints.
If you really want to use model paint there is nothing wrong with the Tamiya aerosols but for larger models they are quite expensive as the tins are quite small.
I use the Halfords aerosols to paint model trucks as they are cheaper and better choice of colours rather than using model paints.
If you really want to use model paint there is nothing wrong with the Tamiya aerosols but for larger models they are quite expensive as the tins are quite small.
Agree with the above for using Halfords paints. I use their primer (grey or white depending on colours to go on top) all the time, and use some of their main colours if I'm spraying large areas. Although of no use to your 747 kit, Halfords 'military paints' (I can't recall their proper title but they're matt camouflage colours) are particularly good and I use the tan and olive drab ones often.
For your kit I'd prime the whole kit in white, spray the wings the generic Halfords Aluminium Silver (comes out nice and bright as I found recently), any gloss white for the fuselage and a dark blue for the remaining sections.
For your kit I'd prime the whole kit in white, spray the wings the generic Halfords Aluminium Silver (comes out nice and bright as I found recently), any gloss white for the fuselage and a dark blue for the remaining sections.
This looks like a good thread for me to get advice on too. I'm not actually painting models (yet) but have the need to paint objects of similar sizes, and I would alike to be able to mix colours before spraying and to have a wide range of paints available, especially satin and matt, and occasionally metallic (but not shiny and smooth).
I don't mind investing a bit, I was thinking along the lines of a quiet compressor, the sort that uses refrigeration motors, and whatever else I might need. A link to good online articles on the subject would be useful too.
I don't mind investing a bit, I was thinking along the lines of a quiet compressor, the sort that uses refrigeration motors, and whatever else I might need. A link to good online articles on the subject would be useful too.
I was thinking along these lines
a DeVilbiss airbrush
https://www.spraygunsdirect.co.uk/index.php/devilb...
and one of these compressors
http://www.axminster.co.uk/bambi-bb24v-compressor-...
I daresay I would be spending more than I needed to, but I've done that in the past with other tools and I've never regretted it, if the tool does more than I need I've usually increased my needs to match
a DeVilbiss airbrush
https://www.spraygunsdirect.co.uk/index.php/devilb...
and one of these compressors
http://www.axminster.co.uk/bambi-bb24v-compressor-...
I daresay I would be spending more than I needed to, but I've done that in the past with other tools and I've never regretted it, if the tool does more than I need I've usually increased my needs to match
Give Paul at little cars/modelling tools a ring, he's the guy to talk to regarding modelling airbrushes.
http://www.modellingtools.co.uk/airbrush--compress...
http://www.modellingtools.co.uk/airbrush--compress...
I've had one of these compressors for a while now.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Flowze-COMPRESSOR-WITH-T...
Its surprisingly quiet and works well.
The included airbrushes could be better quality but while they are working I have no desire to change them.
The only complaint people seem to have with the compressors is the tanks perforate due to rust and leak.
I tend to undo the tank drain screw at least every week to drain the tank of any moisture to hopefully make it less of a problem.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Flowze-COMPRESSOR-WITH-T...
Its surprisingly quiet and works well.
The included airbrushes could be better quality but while they are working I have no desire to change them.
The only complaint people seem to have with the compressors is the tanks perforate due to rust and leak.
I tend to undo the tank drain screw at least every week to drain the tank of any moisture to hopefully make it less of a problem.
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