When I started in the hobby, I had a single action Badger that I used for many years with good results. Later I purchased a double action Badger, also with good results.
When Aztec brought out their airbrush line, I bought a special edition set from my LHS with both a single (External mix) airbrush and the top of the line double action airbrush. The set also included color cups, bottle adaptors and just about every tip they make for the good brush and a few for the cheap one too.
The double action brush has been used by my brother in law and myself to paint somewhere around 100+ hoppers and around 20 locomotives. We've painted several hundred feet of track with it and a number of structures too. It is easy to use, easy to clean, and has shown no signs of ever wearing out.
In the 30+ years I've been in the hobby, I've known a lot of guys with airbrushes and they seem to all have different opinions. Everyone seems to like a different brush or manyfacturer for some reason that is important to them. To me, it was the idea of it spraying very well, with different paints and being easy to clean.
Maybe you can watch a few people use their airbrushes or even try them to see what you think.
ATRcaptain,
Check out this site. www.modeltrainsweathered.com/forum
the best of MTW is where to look for the gouache tips.
you can find it at some Michael's and costa bout $5 a tube. you can order it online from here.
http://www.dickblick.com/zz008/01/
ATRcaptainplease recomend a: Brand/modelType (single/dual action)Any other advice or recomendations
aztec airbrush
I have this one
Thanks for all the great advice! I have been using powders for my rust and Blairline tags for my graffiti. Ive noticed some folks mention (on other websites) that they used an airbrush for their graffiti on HO scale rolling stock. Do any of these airbrushes paint a fine enough line to create my own graffiti and rust streaks? Just trying to broaden my horizons a little. I'm kinda getting tired of using my same ole weathering techniques.
Also, what is the best technique for 3-d rust and paint peeling?
And what in the world is this GOUACHE and where can I find it?
Thanks in advance,
ATRcaptain
I have used a Paasche H model for over 20 years and can say that is great.I only bought a double action Thayer and CHandler Vega to handle camo schemes.
If you're talking about doing graffiti with an airbrush, I hope you're working in G scale or larger. The line you'll be able to get out of an airbrush will be rather large when scaled up in anything smaller.
If this is your first airbrush, I'd recommend a single action and working with it a while to get the feel of coordinating the movement with the spray button, plus to learn the aim and angle to work with. A dual action is a bit more difficult to operate, the spray button has a double movement to it to spray the paint. Most brands allow you to adjust the spray width, so that shouldn't be too big an issue. For better control I'd recommend an internal mix airbrush like the Badger. The Paache I have now is an external mix and would be hard to set for a fine line.
Another thing to consider is what you're spraying. Even the water based paints will be in a fine mist that you'll be breathing in without the proper respiration protection. Solvent based paints are even more critical to have the right kind of respirator. And with any type, I'd recommend doing it outdoors or with a spray booth vented to the outside.
Hi. I am new to this forum and so here goes my first post.
I've been weathering my rolling stock for about 6 months now and want to venture into using an airbrush on them. I need the ability to paint very fine lines (such as for grafitti and rust patterns).
Can yall please recomend a:
Thank yall very much in advance,
ATRcap