criticalem wrote: |
I don't know much about airbrushes and I need one which is good at 1/35 and 1/72 camouflauge, easy to use and most of all.....not expensive. |
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Paasche H is a good reliable workhorse. Using it with its No.1 tip, it can easily deliver a narrow enough line for both 1/35 and 1/72 soft-edge camo, and being single action it is inexpensive and quite easy to use. I've owned a few different airbrushes, but I suspect that if I my first airbrush had been a Paasche H, I may never have bought any other. If buying one of these, get the Paasche H Set which includes all three tip sizes, color cup, and other useful accessories.
Badger 200NH is quite good as well. Also single action, it too is more than capable of doing 1/72 softedag camo. The needle/tip is identical to that of their doubel-action Anthem 155 and theoretically should have slightly better control and atomization than the Paasche, but in actual practice, I don't notice a lot of difference between the two.
A Badger 100 is a well recommended double action airbrush that is not too expensive. Being double action, it takes longer to get the hang of using it because your trigger finger is doing two things at once, but with it's fine needle/tip it could deliver the narrowest line of the three I mentioned, with the caveat that it will be the hardest to learn how to use, and a bit more money.
Out of curiosity, do you still have the Tamiya airbrush and if so, what were your difficulties? Oftentimes, the biggest problems with airbrushing occur not with the airbrush itself but actually using it, i.e. wrong air pressure, improperly thinned paint and/or wrong painting distance. Until you get those variables right, no airbrush will work effectively. My point being that if you still have your Tamiya airbrush, you may not need another one, but simply have to get the hang of using the one you have.