Kosmonot wrote:
The Master is a Taiwan made private label airbrush made for Tri-City Paint (TCP global). It is from the same factory as the PEAK from Bear Air.
May I ask where you found this info? Because all I´ve managed to find out about PEAK is that they are made for Bear Air by Fuso Seiko in Japan. Fuso Seiko also makes Richpen, and if you check out their line of airbrushes, a couple of the PEAKs are very similar to the Richpens. The C-5 is identical except for the back handle, down to the nozzle and needle to the Richpen Apollo 113C. The X-5 is a Richpen Spectra 033 with 0.5mm nozzle setup and plastic cup. I´ve owned the C-5, and compared it to my Richpen, and they where almost identical down to the toolmarks.
I´ve owned a couple of Master airbrushes, as well as a lot of Fuso Seiko made airbrushes, and the differences are usually very noticable, IMHO. Not that the Master series are that bad, but they generally don´t stand up to the japanese made Fuso airbrushes when it comes to tolerances.
As for answering the original post about a beginners airbrush, most double action airbrushes with a 0.3mm nozzle are good. Double actions are not harder to master than single actions IMHO, and today not even the price is a reason for going with the singles. I would even insist that if properly learned and used, there´s nothing that is more complicated with a DA airbrush, and you will have a lot less trouble. The only thing thats important about double actions is that you should always keep the air running. I´ve heard airbrush artists insist that it should be like a mantra, or a second nature to keep the air going. I´ve even heard of artists that remove the spring for the airvalve, so that the air will be going from the moment that you turn on the compressor. The air should be constant, and started as soon as you have put paint into the cup. If you do, you will have less spitting and clogging than with SA airbrushes, and you won´t have the hassle of relearning when you in the future decide to buy a DA airbrush.