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What am I doing wrong on my airbrush?

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  • Member since
    June 2020
What am I doing wrong on my airbrush?
Posted by JimLo on Thursday, September 24, 2020 12:58 AM

I'm new to airbrushing but not new to painting models. I have an Iwata Eclipse HP-CS and am spraying Mr. Color lacquer paints on car models. When I paint I notice that the finished coat is good but not great. There is a fine texture in the paint not sure if it's exactly orange peel. It is slightly more apparent in my first two color coats when I just thin with Mr. Thinner and not Mr. Leveling  Thinner. I spray at around 15psi because I noticed that at 20psi the high level of aerosol in the booth may have contributed to extra "texture" on the car body.

Am I not thinning enough? I am thinning now about 1:2 paint to thinner. It sprays fine on a piece of glossy card stock. I notice I have to spray a about an inch or two away from the model and slowly often going over the same spot three times before there is enough paint for it to look shiny and uniform on each coat. Not sure if I should thin more than 1:2? Or lower psi? Am I doing this right ? The paint is good if I use polishing sanding film on it but I know it can be smoother. thanks. 

Tags: Airbrushing
  • Member since
    August 2015
  • From: the redlands Fl
Posted by crown r n7 on Thursday, September 24, 2020 3:04 AM

it seems the paint is drying  before it reaches the model.

 

 

 Nick.

  • Member since
    November 2018
Posted by oldermodelguy on Thursday, September 24, 2020 6:15 AM

Mr leveling Thinner or adding a little retarder would probably get rid of that. Lowering your pressure some more might even do it. I shoot lacquers around 10 psi quite a bit. I'm imaging the look you describe as being caused by something called solvent popping,which is caused by fast drying solvents repidly escaping through the paint surface.. More air can be just enough to kick this off or you could say less air helps not kick it off.

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2013
  • From: Chicago area
Posted by modelmaker66 on Thursday, September 24, 2020 2:09 PM

Lower the pressure and get closer to the model when you paint.

  • Member since
    June 2020
Posted by JimLo on Thursday, September 24, 2020 6:36 PM

Thanks everyone. Do you think I should try thinning a little more first and then lower PSI to around 10 if the extra thinning doesn't help? Or leave the thinning at about 1:2 color to thinner And lower PSI first?  Ideally should the paint be "smooth" after one pass of the airbrush on the model? Thanks so much. 

  • Member since
    November 2018
Posted by oldermodelguy on Friday, September 25, 2020 7:04 AM

JimLo

Thanks everyone. Do you think I should try thinning a little more first and then lower PSI to around 10 if the extra thinning doesn't help? Or leave the thinning at about 1:2 color to thinner And lower PSI first?  Ideally should the paint be "smooth" after one pass of the airbrush on the model? Thanks so much. 

 

Mr color recommends an initial cut of someplace between 1/1 to 1/2 parts paint to thinner depending how thick your color is from the bottle. Then blend from there for your particular airbrush. I go by viscosity, with a stirring stick I wipe some mixed paint up the side of the mixing cup or airbrush cup, that should run back down the cup in 1-2 seconds or so and leave some film on the wall. If you lift a drop of paint up the side wall and it just sits there then it's way too thick. If it sort of lazy/slowly returns down it's too thick. If it runs or cascades down like water and leaving no film it's too thin. Then I do a test spray for pattern etc. There is a fine line between a bit too thick and just right that really only a test spray can determine. I do a whole setup from primer on up on prescription bottles when trying an untested paint or even color to see how it behaves. And I've been painting for 60 years. I don't use a $25-$100 model as my test piece, I'd rather waste ( if you want to call it that) $2 in materials and some time to be sure how this will go on the considerably more expensive model lol.

  • Member since
    June 2020
Posted by JimLo on Friday, September 25, 2020 12:23 PM

Thanks for the tip with the color cup. I will definitely do that on my next painting job. 

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