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Ah, I remember his post last year now.I won't step on his toes then@Everon Railways hows the Dunmore project coming? Asking for a friend.... LOL.
Next, were the painting issues. I thought painting would be easy, nope! I bought Tru-Color paint as they have the right colors but ran into major adhesion problems. Could not get that paint to stay on the models. Some paints won't grab resin, which is expected. This stuff wouldn't even grab onto a primer. Masking the paint was impossible, it would flake off, even after a gloss coat. I also noticed a major color shift when applied to a white primer. The first shells were stripped like 5-6 times. I abandoned Tru-Color. I have new paint on hand I will be testing.
Have you tried first applying a coat of plastic adhesion promoter, such as that from SEM and typically sold in auto parts stores?https://www.semproducts.com/product/plastic-adhesion-promoter/39863What masking tape were you using?Have you tried the masking tape from Tamiya?https://www.tamiyausa.com/articles/masking-tape-222
I should have had several completed by now. However, its been snag after snag lately. The photo etchings are done. Thanks to Chris for pointing me to PPD for professional results. The MicroMark home etching kit was a disaster. Next, were the painting issues. I thought painting would be easy, nope! I bought Tru-Color paint as they have the right colors but ran into major adhesion problems. Could not get that paint to stay on the models. Some paints won't grab resin, which is expected. This stuff wouldn't even grab onto a primer. Masking the paint was impossible, it would flake off, even after a gloss coat. I also noticed a major color shift when applied to a white primer. The first shells were stripped like 5-6 times. I abandoned Tru-Color. I have new paint on hand I will be testing. The next problem was the end windows. The plan was to insert individually 3d printed window frames. The frames are not fitting properly. I went this route of separate frames as the protective window guard bars are .03 mm thick, which would probably pose a problem casting. The solution is to photo etch the window openings and glue them over the void. The artwork is complete, I just need to submit it.Don't worry about stepping on toes. It wasn't my intent to make the caboose for a kit, and selling is an afterthought. I'm no kit manufacturer I did learn a lot from this project. Had I realized that a caboose has so many damn details, I would have started with the Stillwell project. I should have some completed models in a couple weeks.LOL.[img]http://www.trainboard.com/highball/index.php?media/etching.131828/full&d=1519871561/img][img]http://www.trainboard.com/highball/index.php?media/tru-color.131827/full&d=1519871561/img]Tru-Color, which has since been stripped.
I haven't used a plastic adhesion promoter. My concern is lack of control spraying from a spray can rather than an airbrush.
I use this stuff all the time, and even coming from a spray can, it goes on very thin. I usually give a model 2 coats, and even then you cannot tell I did anything. I don't know how I ever got along without the stuff..My oldest model I've used this on still has 100% of the paint on the handrails, so it absolutely works..
I'll check it out, thank you. I have my doubts that it will solve the Tru-Color adhesion problem. I've applied Tru-Color to other paints and primer that hold well to the resin, and still had adhesion problems with Tru-Color.
@peteski Do you recommend any particular adhesion promoter on resin or plastic, maybe Delrin specifically? I have used just primer on the little bit of plastic I've done but have never painted resin. I expect I will be soon, though.
They came riveted first and then welded. I'd like rivets more than welds (damn tripple etching again)Erie, EL, and Conrail used them. They later had grills over the windows. I'm sure you could sell a bunch.And small enough not to warp or shrink