Seem to spend as much time tearing airbrush apart as painting. Me? Or Equipment?
Mods, feel free to move to airbrush forum if necesarry, but i thought i'd get more views and help here.
First, I am a newbie to airbrushing, but have done ok "winging it". I recently finished 1:48 pby Catalina with similar results. I have sprayed model Master Enamels (without too many issues) but everytime I spray acrylics or acrylic matte clearcoats, I have had issues about 50% of the time. My equipment consists of a brand new (used 3 times now) Paasche Talon, and a Paasche DR3000 compressor with tank, water seperator, regulator. The issue I seem to be having, is at some point the brush seems to clog or partially clog, then paint somehow gets into the body of the airbrush, and gets into the air valve (with the little ball on top the trigger pushes on) and ends up sticking wide open. I had this issue with my FIRST Talon, and when I tried to disassemble it, the allen screw in the bottom of the air valve just stripped out, so I was dead in the water. Being impatient, I bought a second Talon from the LHS, and kept the first one for parts. I alwayse clean my equipment well before putting away, (or maybe I am forced too, when it screws up and I have to completely disassemble it?) and I am not sure If I am screwing something up, or I am having equipment issues? Once that little valve sticks, you are screwed. You must disassemble the air valve from the main body, and take the air valve, spring, plunger, etc apart and clan them. Even then, it still sticks, even though it appears clean. I tried putting a couple drops of oil down there last time I used the brush, and it seemed to fix the probelm, at least until I used it again, then the same issue. I tightened the internal "packing nut" a little bit last time after I had an issue, and maybe 1/8 or 1/4 turn more this time after I had the same issue AGAIN. I dont want to bad mouth Paasche, as I cannopt confirm it is the equipment, and when I mentioned to customer service with the prior brush, they said to send it in and they would give me a new one. The only thing I think may be a contributing factor, is I have not been STRAINING the paint. THis time the paint was AK interactive "german war colors". I had not one issue spraying the dunkelgelb as my base coat last weekend, but when I tried to spray the "olivegrun option 2" today, thats when I had issues, towards the end of my first attempt at free-hand camo. I will admit, that no matter how much shaking or stirring, that olivegrun did NOT want to mix very well. What is my best method for strainin the paint? Automotive body paint strainers (kind of big), pantyhose or somnething? An old t-shirt or sock? I seem to do well and get nice results when the brush is spraying, but I have been getting my butt kicked by it as much as it has worked for me.... ANY TIPS? IDEAS>? I hear stories of people using their airbrush, and simply spraying through some thinner and putting it away until next time. Is this a fairy tale? Different kind of brush? I am about 75% done with 3 different projects, but I am tired of getting my ass kicked by this airbrush.....
Thanks!
Rudy