Figuring that with all the "pros" using it, Tamiya's paint cant be bad, so maybe I just need to learn how to use them.
So I broke out some XF-63 last night and painted some spare parts I have. It went pretty much as I remembered it: I would do one stroke, come back over it or even just next to it, and end up cutting into/removing the first. I continued on trying very hard to make one good pass and found it a challenge: either I would get too much paint and fill in details on the part and have to come back over, ruining the pass, OR not enough paint and have to come back over and risk just picking it all up. I found edges to be especially tricky: With enamels I would just bring the brush accross to either lay down more or pickup any excess but doing that here (again) cut into the paint allready on the adjacent surfaces.
The results after an hour of dry time: Questionable. Its not at all uniform although the excess at edges which I had left seemed to go away on their own. Looks as though 3 coats would be required to get a uniform finish and I question how thick it will be by then and if detail will be sacrificed.
Tonight, after 24 hours, I'm going to do a second coat. I'm also going to try priming some peices with a spray can primer, and see how that changes the way paint goes on. Someone mentioned that it doesnt go well onto bare plastic and I think that might be part of the problem, as if it can cling to it.
Someone else mentioned that Tamiya's thinner is also a retarder? What ratio of paint/thinner should I try?
Will post back as the experiment continues....