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I find that a VL will do large to medium sized free-hand camo quite nicely so long as the paint is properly thinned down but is somewhat challenged to do small mottle-style camo.
Got a picture or a link for the metal cup?
On Ed's bench, ???
waynec ...get over my fear of cleaning my badger...
...get over my fear of cleaning my badger...
Badger promotes itself as being a very easy to clean AB. Can you elaborate?
I will be looking around for a double-action AB next year, and would be interested in your opinion.
Thanks a lot.
You can buy metal cups for a VL that just push into the brush the same as the bottles do. This puts the paint level above the airbrush nozzle. Allows you to use lower pressures just as you would a gravity feed.
beenusing an aztek, my first airbrush. it works fine for base coats but tried a small nozzle for camo and it went south.was able to repaint the base coat and may brush paint it. WHAT I SHOULD DO id get over my fear of cleaning my badger and try using it for the camo. thanks for the advice
Никто не Забыт (No one is Forgotten)Ничто не Забыто (Nothing is Forgotten)
Yes, but it would probably be easier with a gravity fed airbrush, since it handles paint at low pressure better.
Better an airbrush in the hand, than ten in the car....
WIll a VL suffice to spray camouflage or do I need a gravity feed airbrush to handle the lower pressures along with a needle lock?
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