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How do you deal with TAMIYA decals?

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  • Member since
    August 2004
  • From: Nowhere. (Long Island)
Posted by Tankmaster7 on Monday, November 8, 2004 8:47 PM
Hmmmm, most Tamiya decals I've used ar OK. Just abit thick maybe, but that's nothing I'm not. LOL. They go on ok, and react well to the testors decal set stuff. I would reccomend aftermarket decals. As for me, I haven't used aftermarket decals yet, but I will eventually...
-Tanky Welcome to the United States of America, a subsidiary of Exxon Mobil Corporation, in partnership with Halliburton. Security for your constitutional rights provided by Blackwater International.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Tuesday, November 9, 2004 6:29 AM
hey ive made a few tamiya cars and have had no probs with the decals. i think i read somewhere on the box that a coupke were cartograph decals. my first kit was a wrc wrx and all the decals ( even c/f ones) went on good with not solvent solutions.... a few cars later im now using micro sol and set and my decals look awesome.... heres something which may help u guys....
dont let the decals soak in water for a long time, i place mine in the water, shake it round for a few secs ( till all air bubbles are off) then let it sit on my bench till it comes off the paper. while im waiting for this i apply micro sol/set?? ( #1 bottle, i get mixed up) to the model, then i transfer the decal with a brush., then apply some more #1 ontop. while im doing this i will work out any airbubbles underneath with the brush, and postion the decal to conform as best as i can. when it is dry, then i will apply soloution #2 sparingly ontop of the decal. i always get good results doing it like this, have never ad any wrinkle up on me.....
i also have some mr mark softner, but dont like to use this as i feel its stronger than micro sol"set (#2) and it leaves a rough surface on the decal...
hope this helps...
  • Member since
    August 2003
  • From: Ireland
Posted by Spurdog on Thursday, November 11, 2004 9:54 AM
Last week I had the misfortune to have the decals of my 1/48 scale Tamiya Mitsubishi Dinah disintegrate before my very eyes after I had dipped them in water. They just cracked up into small bits - totally unusable.
Had to send away for a set of Aeromaster decals which haven't arrived yet...
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 12, 2004 2:47 PM
In about 1,100 posts, this is, to my loss, the first time I've visited this room. It just so happens that last night I had a typical Tamiya nightmare. And this one counts, because it's being done for money and reputation as well, because it's part of an assignment for (Mumble, mumble) Well-Known Foreign Model Magazine. Flying is my hobby, but scale modeling and researching those models are my passion. Journalism has always been my profession. After a long lay off, I'm taking another dip into combining my profession and my passion, and have taken on more work than I can handle.
But enough of the boring part, that was just so you'd know what's at stake. I won't go into the details of what the feature is about, but it involves making two A6M3's (among four total 1/48 builds for this one project). I started Zero No. 1 using a fine old old warhorse in plastic, still in production, still one of the best bargains in modeling, the Tamiya series of Zeroes that came out in the late 70s, early 80s. They've risen steadily in price until my modern number came up to a staggering $14.00. From box art to, yep, the decal sheet, not one thing has changed about this series of Zeroes since its release. Not even the box. My build was the clipped wing Type 32, and it was to be built alongside a much newer kit, the Hasegawa A6M3 Type 22, which, in real life, actually came out after the type 32, but that's a different story. They just put the wing tips back on, basically. I wanted the two zeroes so I could compare one type of decals with another type of markings.
What in God's name was I thinking using an old Tamiya kit for this project, to illustrate a plane with markings right out of the box? Not that their latest decals have improved much. But considering how many transluscent decals we get with no adhesive on the back, here we get decals that are the texture of vinyl and are seemingly held down with expoxy of some sort. I mean, if you don't position them exactly where they belong on the first pass, you can forget it, buddy. Especially on anything the size of a hinamaru or larger. I wound up stripping off the attractive wide blue and yellow fuselage and tail stripes, which were ruined, and using the scheme with nothing but a mixture of black Japanese and Western characters. And, even after a good coat of Testors semi-gloss laquer had had a full 24 hours to cure over a Polly Scale gray, the surface still became sticky under the usually very benign, tame Micro Set and Sol. Well, I know Tamiya's decals, and I know they'll wrinkle up almost to a wad, and I know that usually, if you don't mess with them, they will, like magic, settle right down to nice round hinomarus. They did. But all else was ruined, and I don't know yet how it's going to stand up to close up color photography (BTW, if you live in my area, and are a model photographer, and need some good international magazine exposure, my email's right here. Ha, I broke a rule, I just know I did!)
Anyhow, to wrap up this saga, to replace the really destroyed and necessary markings, like the data plate under the leading edgeof the horizontal stabilizer, I robbed the Hasegawa kit, whose marking didn't interest me anyway.
But now I need to find some new ones, and I can't seem to find a good supplier of AM decal sheets for WW II Japanese types. One reason is the really pitiful lack of accurate historical records on such things as striping and stencils, which is another thing addressed in the article. If anyone can steer me toward some good A6M3 decal sheets, I'll forever be in their debt, which is worth about...squat. But if you ever need markings, and I got em, they are yours. I've been piling up on that kind of thing lately, unsolicited review copies of this and that in which I have duplicate copies.
Thanks for hearing my tale of woe,
Tom
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 12, 2004 2:59 PM
I just had a revelation that requires its own space: I recently went way out of my usual territory and built the two classic Tamiya Mid-60s F1 cars, the Lotus 25 Coventry Climax (my favorite all time F1 car) and the attractive Honda RA 272 of the same period (sure wish Tamiya would give us a whole series, continuing with a BRM). Anyhow, the decals on both kits were exquisite, including some very find striping around compound curves on the Lotus. It didn't hit me until that rant a half-hour ago that those models, very satisfying builds all around, were finished with Tamiya's own decals. Now, if they can do it on a car kit of the same price, why can't they do it on their airplanes?
Tom
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 12, 2004 3:22 PM
I have never had a problem with Tamiya decals, but I have only used there armor decals (the Tamiya aftermarket German Panzer Sheets I and II). I use libral amounts of Solva-set and leave them alone until they are dry. They do wrinkle up alot when wet, but flatten out fine (this even worked when I put some over the view ports in a Panzer I). I then top coat with Testers Clear Flat.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, November 13, 2004 6:49 PM
No, I should have made a very long story very short: Tamiya's a/c decals are way too thick, and if you want to move them in place more that two second after you place them on the model, they will rip apart and distort. The will wrinkle after you put setting solution on them. If you don't touch them, they will settle down. But you must get them in the right place on the first pass. In short, even on their most expensive kits (and that's very expensive indeed) the decals are a disgrace.
Tom
  • Member since
    December 2003
Posted by cbreeze on Sunday, November 14, 2004 7:55 PM
Greetings,

Just had to add my $.02. I am back in the hobby after 12 or so years of other interests. As a result, I am trying to sharpen up my modeling skills and learning new ones. I am finishing a Tamiya 1/48 Corsair and am to the point where I am adding decals. I used the Tamiya decals out of the box and did not have any problems at all. I found that they responded well to Microset and Microsol. I also used a few decals, nose art, from Cutting Edge and didn't really notice a difference. I also used some of the small Tamiya decals. Other than being a pain to position, didn't have any silvering problems. It is probably true that the Tamiya decals are a little thicker but once on the model, didn't notice a difference.
  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 15, 2004 7:23 PM
Well, you pointed out something else about Tamiya decals. They are a pig in a poke. I always (except in this case, where I deliverately used the kit decals) but an AM sheet when I but a Tamiya kit because you never know what you are going to get as far as decals go. Like I said above, the F1 cars had decals as good as any aftermarket sheets I've used, but for the most part, at best you can say they're too thick and won't settle into panel lines. At worst, they are, quite simply, the worst. And for the most expensive mass market kits out there, that's shameful and there is no excuse. Are you listening Tamiya? I doubt it, because this complaint has been shouted at deaf ears for twenty years.
BYW, I wound up canning a $36 F4D Skyray model because I opted to use the kit decals, even though I knew better, and I used the scheme where the decals covered half the plane. It looked like I'd glued guady construction paper on a really nice model. I stuck it in the box without even finishing the canopy and landing gear. I was so discouraged at trying to strip them off, I gave up.
Tom
  • Member since
    February 2006
Posted by armorall on Monday, August 23, 2010 1:47 PM

This is a big problem. I have old Tamiya decals that are thirty years old and they are great with a little Solvaset. Tried to decal the new Tamiya Stug III B and the decals turned out to be a wreck. Ditched those decals, pulled some old Tamiya ones from the stash and they did great.

    Need to contact Tamiya about this and find out whats up. We need instructions on how to deal with the new decals.

I will watch this thread like a hawk.

                             Rowdycat

  • Member since
    November 2005
Posted by Anonymous on Monday, August 23, 2010 1:49 PM

I don't--most are thicker than a 2X4...

  • Member since
    February 2007
  • From: Brunswick, Ohio
Posted by Buckeye on Sunday, January 9, 2011 10:31 AM

saltydog
hmmmmm.........funny, i've never had a minutes trouble out of tamiya's decals. i use microsol, dob some around where the decals sits, i dip my decals in tap water for about 5 seconds, then i leave it on the side of the dish, never let them "soak" in water too long as this will make them lose they're adhesive properties, and they will be more apt to tear. when the decals has been on for a few, i dob some microset on it, and let it sit for another while, then, i keep adding microset until she's snugged down nicely into panel lines and raised areas. later.

BTW, all of these are tamiya kits, using OOB decals.

Couldn't agree more.  I've built several Tamiya aircraft kits and have never had a problem with their decals.

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Philippines
Posted by constructor on Friday, January 21, 2011 12:01 AM

Surprisingly enough, I 've never had too much problems with Tamiya decals. They're rather on the thick side but I find them easy to apply. One thing though, I do not apply decal softener when the surface does not have too much raised lines or rivets. I find that it works better without the softener. But you are right they wrinkle specially if the decal surface is a little to big, like letters in the fuselage of your Spitfire. You should try the Dragon decals, man they are hard! You can lift them off their backing and it stands up. I also mix a very little amount of Elmer's glue with the water I will use.

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