Modeling the Baltimore waterfront in HO scale
I haven't used his spray cans, but the Woods enamel gave me fits spraying thru an air gun. Then it didn't want to harden till after a week and alot of baking. Needless to say, I havn't tryed it since as I wound up stripping it off and starting over with a custom match done with Dupont automotive paint.
Jim
When spraying with enamel, be sure & give the surface a good flash coat first, just an even mist type spray, & let set a minute or two before full coats are applied. That gets it tachy for the full coat to stick nicely to. Did you use a good primer ?
Thanks,John
I've been painting scale models and restoring trains for pretty much my whole life (I'm 34). I've used just about every brand and I've certainly used every type of paint on a more than regular basis. I believe Woods' paint in the bottle is garbage thru a spray gun. It's not user friendly and it's my opinion that you're better off spending the extra money on a proffesional quality paint if you expect proffesional quality results. I find the $40.00 I spend on a Dupont, 2 part automotive base color is cheap in the long run because that pint can paint alot of trains and the durability and finish is second to none. If you're just a "weekend" restorer, take a walk down the paint aisle in Home Depot or Lowe's. Many of the Krylon and Rustoleum sprays are very good matches. Bring along your project and match it up on the spot.
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