Here in SA it is near imposable to get hold of any of the series of Alclad paints as the supliers do not bring it in atall.
I want to do a 1/72 F-104 in the USAF sceeme that had the highly pollished alluminium fuselarge but any “non- metalizer” paint will just not give the right feel.
Has anyone ever successfully used some of the “rattle-can” lacure tipes from hardware stores on models?They do make a chrome that looks pretty close to pollished allu.
Are you able to buy SnJ aluminium over there? I’ve found that it, along with the polishing powder, can produce a very realistic NMF. You might be able to order it from Hawkeye’s Hobbies.
You might try aluminum foil - I’ve seen photos of some really nice looking NMF finishes that were done using foil. I have no expierience with it yet, but am planing on tryin it in the near future.
Decanting rattlecan paint is very doable. The paint will even be all airbrush ready! Only thing to really watch out for is giving the freshly decanted paint some time to sit as it will be saturated with gas from the can.
Thanx for the reply guys. I will try to see what we can get here in darkest Africa, I have seen rattlecan silver chrome used on other materials and it really is shiny. I was not sure if it had some or other “extras” in it that might damage the styrene. Will try it out on some scrap first.
Do any of you lads know what clearcoat will be most compatable with the silver? If it is a lacure based thing I recon an anamle like Tamiya or Humbrol thinned will eat it??? SO maybe Tamiya clear acrylic then??
The decanting idea is actually a good one as I think the effect of the finer spray out the airbrush will be better than a can-nozle.
With the krylon paint you can ONLY use acrylic paint on it, any others will destroy the finish(as in it will mix with what ever color you try to paint on it). If you shoot a clear oy use acrylic but it will dull the shine on it.
I have “decaned” some rattlecan into a little plastic cup by spraying it at point blank range into the cup. It is rather messy though. Otherwize you could hold the can upside down and depress the nozle untill all the propellant is depelted.As the pick up for the paint is at the bottom of the can it will only spray out what was in the line and then no more paint will flow.
Then you could somehow make a hole in the noe de-presurized can and take the paint out into a smaller container.
[dto:] If you can get your hands on the metal powder(s), DO IT! I love the stuff and the powder will cover countless planes. I bought my one and only bottle of SnJ aluminum powder back around 9 years ago and I’m still using it. A little bit goes a very long way.
You might want to check a craft store for wax-based, rub-on metallics. Biggest names stateside are Rub 'n Buff and some other name I can’t remember (excellent branding, that). Looks very, very good on a finished aircraft. This Spit IX from the local contest last fall was done up with wax-based metallic - pewter I think it was.
I tried the Krylon silver foil paint over a sheet of Poly, prepared with Gunze Mr. Surfacer 1200 gray primer and polished to a mirror surface working up to 12000 grit cloths. Sprayed the Krylon and got a shiny coat but with slight orange peel texture. Trying to sand off the orange peel with 12000 grit only turned it gray, I think it removed the silver right down to the primer. I was not happy with the results so guess I will stick with Alclad, or perhaps SnJ, although I have no experience with that.
You must of been spraying too far away from your piece. There is a happy medium with that paint where you have to spray close enough otherwise it will not coat right. My B-17G turned out amazing with the paint.