Well I had a nice long reply typed out this midday to all the previous posts to add my 2cents to after my last one, and of course my stinking ASUS tablet had to dump it... If I did not have so much stuff saved on there I would take it down the street to the ocean and toss it into the surf for a saltwater and sand electronics death... one day
Silentbob, I cant recommend any specific pressure offhand, but I do suggest this: take a piece of paper or an index card and use it for testing. Dial down your air source another 2 PSI and do some test lines, if they are still too wide, dial down 2 more PSI and try again. You may need to thin the paint down a bit more as your pressure decreases. it is very much trial and error, but it works.
BlackSheep and Sparten, thank you. I am in the zone here and having a blast.
Eagle, youre off to a nice start on your 234. Those have an imposing air about them to me. the forerunners of todays BTRs and LAVs.
Schmidty, youre very welcome. AS you can see you have a lot of leeway in how you paint the stripes. If you look at the Tempest in the photo I posted, even on a single aircraft there can be variety. Extremely neat fuselage striping, coupled with less neatly done wing striping. Unless your doing a well photographed aircraft like Gabby's Jug or Old Crow, you are very much hard to be called inaccurate.
Wayne, I hope the problems pass quickly and successfully for you.
Today's update was minimal. I added the flex ammo chutes for the tail guns. I had some PE ones from a Verlinden US Aircraft MG set doing nothing but sittng in a drawer for years so...
More tomorrow...
F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!
U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!
N is for NO SURVIVORS...
- Plankton
LSM