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...I find that it absolutely cannot be brush painted or it will almost instantaneously dissolve the paint it’s going over. You can touch up with it but only if you can ‘dab on’ a spot of paint with no movement of the brush.
Thanks for the suggestions, gents. I’ve also had several bottles congeal after what I consider a short time. At $5.99/ bottle that’s a lot of wasted cash! 😡Bob, now that you mention it I do recall this paint needing a lot higher pressure than others. Do you think yellow will cover ok without a primer coat?
As a long time user of Accu-Paint I was really happy to find out that Tru-COlor paint is pretty much the same as Accu-Paint. I was told that it is not a paint but solvent-based ink. Whatever it is, it works really well shot through airbrush. The other posts already give good painting technique.I'll a$$ that I highly recommend using their own thinner. While it is acetone-based, it is a blend of other solvents which have slower evaporation rate. That is why it is the best to use the dedicated thinner. They also sell the slower evaporation solvents as "R E T A R D E R". It is worth to have around to add to the mixture as needed.I had to spell that word in a strange way becuase the forum's "naughty" filter was censoring it. Both Accu-Paint and Tru-Color use those silly plastic bottles where the solvent seems to evaporate through the plastic or the cap seal. Really poor packaging. I found a solution to the problem: As soon as I buy a new bottle, I re-bottle them into standard Foquill 1oz. glass bottles. I also add an aluminum seal over the standard seal on the Floquil caps. I also add couple of glass beads as agitators. Then I screw the lid on tightly and shake the bottle to have the paint inside the bottle to seal the lip of the bottle. I have some bottles of still perfectly usable Accu-Paints that are about 30 years old. Here is an example of the glass bottles holding my paints. I originally started doing that when Accu-Paint went out of business with no hope of a replacement paint.As you can see, I take a fine permanent marker and mark the paint level and the month/year the bottle was last sealed. As shown, some have not been opened for quite a few years and almost no thinner has evaporated. The bottle on the left is Tru-Color, the other 2 are Accu-Paints. Yes, I realize what I do is a lot of extra work, but to me it is well worth it.One more thing: these paints are not enamels (more like lacquers), so if the dried up paint is still even slightly liquid, it can be reconstituted by adding the Tru-Color thinner. I have also done that successfully.
@peteski Very good advice Peter! I have one question and one thing to add about tru-color paints.Question: Do you have a source for clear glass bottles like the old Floquil bottles you're showing???
@peteski Very good advice Peter! I have one question and one thing to add about tru-color paints.Question: Do you have a source for clear glass bottles like the old Floquil bottles you're showing???Add: Tru-color paint used to sell what they called "Rejuvenator" (TCP-999-16 or -2), but when looking at their site today, I can't find it. I am going to bet that it was just their thinner in a differently labeled bottle. It can still be found online, for about the same price as their thinner, so I'm going to bet that's the case.Tru-color paint says in their old literature that for dried-up paints, just fill the bottle back up, wait a spell, and you'll have viable paint again. I think I'm gonna order a 16oz bottle of it while it's still available at various hobby shops...just in case it isn't merely "thinner".Cheerio!Bob Gilmore