Originally posted by groffus
I think its to thin because its very runny. Maybe as you said I am to close. To be honest I am scared to use it again in case I balls everything up. How long should it take to dry? How far away should I hold the gun from the tank?
It sounds like you are putting too much paint down.
One of several cures:
1. Reduce the pressure. If you are using that can top thing, turn it down. Makes your air go further and you are not blasting things.
2. dial down the paint nozzel further - this puts it not quite in the air stream and less paint is pulled out.
3. pull further back. With this gun, you should be in the neighborhood of 12-18\" away (30-50 cm.)
4. move faster - this seems obvious, but actually takes a bit to master.
5. Don\'t start or stop on the model - Start your spray off of the model, move across the model, then end your spray off of the model.
If everything is working right, you should almost fog the model - the paint should be thin enough that it lays a very thin - almost transparent layer down on the model. It should take 2 or 3 passes to build up a nice primed mini.
If it looks gritty, your paint is too thick or you are too far away or you need to turn the pressure up a bit.
I am sorry these are probably the most stupid questions you ever heard but I am new to sprayguns and I would like to do it right.
We all started somewhere. The airbrush is probably the least intiutive tool in an artest set. Don\'t be afraid of it - like everything else, it takes practice. If you can find someone that knows what they are doing, get them to take an hour with you. It is worth soo much more to be with an actual instructor than anything I can write here.
Try the library for any of the Airbrush Action videos.
Terry Hill\'s
Learn to Airbrush series is great. I\'m not sure if they were produced by Airbrush Action or Createx.