QUOTE: ok i think u both may have a point... ab's are designed to be able to control to air flow, but the range of control makes its tricky and fiddly... i know where both of u are coming from.... |
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Actually air VALVES are designed to be able to control air VOLUME (not pressure, volume. Pressure is constant). The airbrush itself is designed to MIX the air and paint, and spray it in a uniform manner.
Nobody said you COULDN'T use the trigger to control the air volume, only that you SHOULDN"T use it. The volume of air and the pressure it is under are what cause the paint to be atomized in the airbrush. When you start constantly varying the paint volume and the air volume you are not going to be able to get consistant results. At low air volume the paint is not going to atomize properly and the pattern is going to be coarser and grainier. The best way to use an airbrush, in my opinion, is to use the regulator to adjust the air pressure. The air trigger is either on or off, and the paint flow is changing as necessary.
QUOTE: anyways, bak to the topic ;) im starting to get the hang of it, pull the trigger back further for spraying a whole piece, then less paint to go in closer and touch up and spots i missed... am i along the right lines??? (btw.. the finish is awesome!!! ;) ) |
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More or less, yes you are right. Think of it like using a garden hose to wash your car. Get up close at full volume and you blow water everywhere, so you don't open the spray nozzle so much or you back away from the car. Airbrushing is the same, use enough paint volume to get the job done the way you want it, but not so much that it blows everywhere.
QUOTE: also, do u guys try to ab everypiece all the colours it has to be, doing alot of masking along the way, or just ab the main parts and hand paint the rest ( i dont think i explained that to well, but i hope u guys know what i mean)
once again, THANKS!!
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Like Mike, I'll hand brush small detail parts but anything much larger than, say, a dime gets airbrushed.