Decals will stick to any smooth, glossy surface including plastic. If the plastic is the color you want wash the car with isopropal alcohol & apply the decals . Use a setting solution & give it a good coat of Dulcote. Weather it & another coat of dulcote. You won't be able to tell it from a painted model & you will save time & money. jerry
ATLANTIC CENTRAL Not trying to make trouble here, but your question speakes directly to the changes in this hobby over the 40 years I have been at it. In 1968, every 12 year old with an HO train knew the answer to your question and expected nothing more of an "undecorated" model. For me and others, this is a hobby about building stuff. Sheldon
Not trying to make trouble here, but your question speakes directly to the changes in this hobby over the 40 years I have been at it.
In 1968, every 12 year old with an HO train knew the answer to your question and expected nothing more of an "undecorated" model.
For me and others, this is a hobby about building stuff.
Sheldon
Yeah, I always interpret 'undecorated' as bare palstic, 'unlettered' as painted but no lettering.
Accurail then adds a few more options, because they offer a lot of their models with dimensional data only - so they are painted and have the dimensional stencils decaled on, but no road name or number. For those that freelance their railroad name and have their own decals for that.
--Randy
Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's
Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.
Undecorated always means what you have there, raw plastic. Some kits are available "painted / unlettered" or "painted / data only" which means that the basic data (length, height, built date etc.) is there but no railroad specific lettering.
Plastic tends to have "waves" in it due to the process of filling the molds, so just using a plastic kit "as is" usually is a bad idea. If I were building the kit, I would paint at least the body primer gray and then black, then spray gloss finish for the decals to be applied over.
"Airbrush? We don't need no stinkin' airbrushes..."
Well, if you really want to shoot that car with a color you can't get pre-canned for your pleasure, then yep, an airbrush is necessary. Tell, you the truth though, I have several airbrushes and it's a once a year thing for me to bother with that. Eventually, I hope to set up a spray booth to make that process more inviting. Not dissing them, but spray can paint works for me most of the time.
I think you want anything "undecorated" to be totally naked to start with. If you're bashing or otherwise cutting or adding materials, then you don't want a previous paint job in the way, even if it's all one color of primer. Same thing with a kit, otherwise you need to scrape each joint area to ensure a good bond.
Leaving the kit bare leaves the builder with the most options. You can paint parts on the sprue or you can assemble then paint or whatever combination works best for the specific model.
Mike Lehman
Urbana, IL
The term can mean either painted no lettering or unpainted. I've seen it both ways. Also some cars (usually cheaper lines) are lettered directly on the plastic (don't know if Bowser is one of these) so undecorated is also unpainted.
Paul
tstage If a kit is designated as "undecorated", is it usually unpainted, as well? I just bought an undecorated Bowser 55-ton "fishbelly" hopper to detail for the AC&Y. It's black in color (what I want) but it's not painted. My understanding is that I'll need to paint the car first before the decals will adhere properly. Tom
If a kit is designated as "undecorated", is it usually unpainted, as well? I just bought an undecorated Bowser 55-ton "fishbelly" hopper to detail for the AC&Y. It's black in color (what I want) but it's not painted.
My understanding is that I'll need to paint the car first before the decals will adhere properly.
Tom
Tom,
Bachmann makes it a point to define their "unlettered" products as "painted and unlettered" - not undecorated.
Do you have an air brush?
I tried decaling on bare plastic just once, and the decals just pealed right off. I always paint an unpainted car, I will prime black plastic with a light colored primer and then apply the color coat, even if I am painting with black, although I have stopped that practice since I have been using Scalecoat II which does not require a primer. But I have found I get a better covererage even with Scalecoat II if I do use a primer for things that are painted with white, yellow or orange.
Using Scalecoat II avoids the gloss coating before decaling as it dries with a gloss finish right out of the bottle. I usally follow that up with dullcoat to seal the decal. Also use a decal setting solution to make the decal snuggle down over rivits etc.
Rick J
Rule 1: This is my railroad.
Rule 2: I make the rules.
Rule 3: Illuminating discussion of prototype history, equipment and operating practices is always welcome, but in the event of visitor-perceived anacronisms, detail descrepancies or operating errors, consult RULE 1!
The decals on an undecorated car will look awful if you don't paint the model first. The bare plastic is too shiny for a prototype look. (Some plastics the decals will not adhere or will adhere and eventually fall off.) I like to decal and build from undecorated kits. I always put on a light coat of primer before painting. A gloss color is supposed to be used before applying the decals, followed by a coat of Dull Cote after the decals are applied and the car is weathered.
At the very least washing the car to rid it of any mold release compounds would be needed in order to get anything to stick to it whether it be paint or decals. If it the car body is smooth and shiney after the washing then you may need to prime it so the decals will stick. Generally paint does not stick well to things that are real smooth and shiney.
Modeling a railroad hypothetically set in time.
Undecorated usually means the raw plastic as it came out of the molds. Will decals stick? The LION does not know. The only place the LION ever got decals to stick were on his toes and on his nose. LION was NOT impressed, but what could he do. Even LIONS have limitations.
ROAR
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
Having built a lot of models from "undecorated" kits, I can say that what you have is common. They're usually unpainted, and will look awful if not painted first before applying decals, although decals may successfully adhere to unpainted surfaces.
Some of today's manufacturers offer cars primered but unlettered (such as Tangent). They still typically need paint.
Rob Spangler
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.