What are modelers using as a track rag. The ones that are available at places like Home Depot are really stiff and don’t work very well. Any suggestions?
My go to has been Testor’s Model Master Tack cloth.
Having used nothing else, this nothing more than sharing what I’ve used. I have no idea how they might stack up against other products, but I’ve been satisfied.
Thanks Greg. I’ll give those a try. Amazon does not have those so I’ll try ebay.
You’re sure welcome, Johny. Hope you can find some and they work out for you.
I tended to pick mine up at a HobbyLobby, but that’s probably not an option right now.
I don’t use tack rags. I find that they have a “sticky” feel, that rubs off on my hands. I can’t help but think that whatever that waxy sticky stuff is, will rub off onto the model and adversely affect painting. If I need to clean a model before painting, I use dish detergent and water, and let it air dry overnight.
I know the tack rags that you are referring to. They are sold at Home Depot. I also wash my models with soap and water prior to panting, but I need something to remove the dust immediatly prior to painting.
i’ve wondered the same about that tackiness rubbing off on the model, Chuck.
I think that was a good observation to post.
I agree with Chuck 100%. I have some of those “stickey” tack rags in the basement. I stopped using those on my models because they would leave a stickey residue behind. Has anyone used a microfiber cloth as a tack rag?
Blow them down with air from the compressor. will remove virtually all of it. Only time I’d tack one off is a car body.
Don’t know what they use on the hobby type ones, but the automotive ones used to be some kind of varnish or shellac. Trick is to LIGHTLY drag one across without putting any pressure on it.
I use a paper towel with some isopropyl on it. No sticky residue. It doesn’t last long- evaporates very fast, but does let the towel pick up a lot of lint and sanding dust while it stays wet. You just have to keep putting it on. I use it on enamels and lacquers. Never tried it on acrylics, though.