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It think that the spray quality can be improved by heating up the cans to make the paint flow better. I use hot tap water and submerge the cans for 10 minutes or so. I would never use a heat source that is any hotter. Best wishes, Dave
If you can find any colors that are appropriate in the Tamiya product line, I would give their spray cans a go... I'm very impressed on how nice their paints go on.
IAN! I agree that Krylon is a good bulk paint for plastic models. You usually get 12ounces for a price very close to the little 3 ounce hobby size cans. I've onlyused the Krylon "Fusion" (for plastics) line and have no experience with their"regular" paints. I also like Testors, Tamiya, and Floquil rattle cans althoughthe Fusion paint cans have a nicer tip. Heating the cans (carefully) is veryimportant as others have said. Also, I shake them rigorously for a full twominutes in every possible direction after heating. If the color isn't perfect forthe project, I tweak it with paint washes or weathering powders + Dullcote.Jeff (MrKLUKE)
I think "light coats" means no drips.
Are you guys really able to get "light" coats from a spray can? If I try to go light with a spray bomb, the droplets never fuse into a smooth finish. So I go fairly heavy so the droplets can fuse and the paint can level itself off. If there's a lot of pigment in the paint, then this is a problem, but if the pigment is less, then I get a smoother finish by making the whole model wet.Same thing applies for Testor's Dullcote. I soak my models so the finish is even. There's so much carrier and so little finish, that it never seems to build up to an objectionable point. I always hear "light coats" being mentioned in the hobby press too, but just don't see how that works in practice.