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Primer colors for Modern Softskins

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  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: west springfield,mass
Primer colors for Modern Softskins
Posted by rudedog on Tuesday, December 29, 2015 2:35 PM

While the Search feature was great for WWII primer questions, I'd like to know what is currently being used on Mid-east U.S. Humvee's & the like.I saw somewhere [ Can't recall where or the validity ] That Nato black was what's under the Army/Marine Sand color paint. My U.S.M.C. paint chipping experiences are prehistoric.Any modern motor-pool vets or historians help would be appreciated. I'm doing an M-1151 &  I want the sand chipping &weathering to be accurate. Thanks,Keith.

"...That's an order,not a debate topic , Sergeant Rudzik..."

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by T26E4 on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 5:41 AM
My advice: don't fall into the current weathering fad of chipped paint for this model. If you want realism, don't chip the paint. You'd need a doggone ice pick to scrape this stuff. And it surely wouldn't chip off in flakes.

Roy Chow 

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  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: west springfield,mass
Posted by rudedog on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 11:29 AM

Thank You, Roy.I'll heed your advice.Logically,paint technology has come a long way since WWII,& I do try to temper following the latest new methods until I try to ferret out their legitimacy.I would be curious of your opinion of using discreet chipping on WWII vehicles.Since it was a war of production & I assume all sides were cranking out vehicles as fast as possible plus the paints were probably of varying qualities,would you then advise it as part of overall weathering ? Your thoughts on that would be appreciated. Again, thanks, Keith Rudzik.

"...That's an order,not a debate topic , Sergeant Rudzik..."

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 2:17 PM

Even in WWII, most countries had good quality control for the base paint on vehicles. Yes paint would chip, but nowhere near as much as seen on the current "trendy" models. Look at actual WWII photos and chipping is minimal to non existant in most cases. WWII vehicles had short service lives, often only months long before they were destroyed, lost, or replaced. Dirty, dusty, and muddy, yes. Chipped, maybe if they have been thru a few fights and survived. If you are a vet, think back to your service time and how vehicles you served on or around looked. You wont go wrong from that starting point.

 

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  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: west springfield,mass
Posted by rudedog on Wednesday, December 30, 2015 3:51 PM

Jogging my memory of near 4 decades was a great idea,stikpusher.While i was an Engineer,not in an armored unit,I still saw plenty of them.Your so right that time & effort would be better spent on what they looked like more so from cleanliness than paint wear.Dings from Small arms or larger would make more sense than What I've seen at model shows lately.One magazine article of a British WMIK was so overdone you'd have thought it had been sandblasted ,point blank, over the whole thing.I think it would have taken a monthlong sirocco for that much paint to have been removed ! Thanks for your input. Keith R.

"...That's an order,not a debate topic , Sergeant Rudzik..."

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