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I have seen photos of your painting area in the past Daniel - very impressive! Good to see Badger represented here (other than my lowly model 200). I like mine because like I said, I don't do weathering (maybe I'll start someday), and I just use it as a mini spray-gun (which is what the 200 is perfect for). I have used double-action airbrushes in friend's workshops (when working on their layouts,and even doing some weathering of their stuff), so I'm familiar with how they work. I also did buy a Badger Anthem (?) dual action airbrush when they were dumping them at Michael's for really short money (IIRC, around $40). I have it put away until I have a need for dual action.
The 155 Anthem is a really good brush. It would still be my daily driver had I not got such a deal on the 360. I really wonder about airbrush pricing in general. EBay Amazon and those 50% off coupons at Michael's and AC Moore make paying retail for a brush absurd. Maybe I'm just an opportunistic buyer. When one comes around at a steal I'll jump. I don't know if any other American tools you can get for 50-70% off with some regularity.As for your 200... It does work well with your preferred smelly paints. Back in college I used to weather cars in my dorm room... With Dullcote. It cause obvious health problems and I have backed away from solvent paints since. With acrylics, you really do need a dual action if you use it a lot. This helps with tip clogging. Pull the trigger back (no air), swipe the tip with a wet q tip and carry on.Not mentored yet here is the sand blaster. Badger has the Air Eraser, and it is just about the only product I have used that will strip paint off resin without ruining it. Well with the price.
Well I impulsively picked up some Vallejo at hobby lobby thanks to a coupon. Will compare results with my enamels and let that influence any future paint purchases. It is hard to give up some spray bomb colors I like such as the rustoleum camo line but when I am through with my current stock of rustoleum, testors and floquil I want to settle on one brand of paint. The Vallejo products look quite promising. Not using as many nasty solvents would be a plus down the line.
It is hard to give up some spray bomb colors I like such as the rustoleum camo line but when I am through with my current stock of rustoleum, testors and floquil I want to settle on one brand of paint.
With the wide range of models I build, I don't think I can ever become a single-paint-brand modeler. And I often decant spray bombs to shoot them through the airbrush. You also seem to be into building all sorts of models. I think you will be severely limiting yourself by only using single brand (and type) of paints.