I have finally gotten around to building the 1/1000 PL TOS Enterprise kit and I am having a bad problem with the decals silvering.
They went down on top of a pretty good gloss coat of paint and I used Micro Set, Micro Sol and Mr. Mark Softener, and none of them seem to affect the clear carrier film.
Has anyone found anything that can soften these decals?
Thanks
Mike
Decal Problem w/ 1/1000 Polar Lights TOS Enterprise
Moderators: DasPhule, Moderators
-
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Sat Sep 22, 2007 1:42 am
-
- Posts: 584
- Joined: Sat Sep 22, 2007 1:42 am
- Banshee1000
- Posts: 330
- Joined: Mon Jun 21, 2010 3:48 pm
- Location: Illinois
I had the same problem, they laugh at Micro set and scoff at Solvaset.
I went with PNT decals for the first Enterprise. I used the kit decals with my Scout conversion, and used thinned watery glue, then carefully cut the large decals up with a sharp blade and then lots of Micro set applications.
I use Testors Gloss Coat because of my difficult problems with Future (I don't have the muse everyone else seems to have) applied over a really smooth surface (down to 1500 grit). But I'm on the Klingon D-7 now, and I'm going to give the Future a go.
Good luck.
Alan
I went with PNT decals for the first Enterprise. I used the kit decals with my Scout conversion, and used thinned watery glue, then carefully cut the large decals up with a sharp blade and then lots of Micro set applications.
I use Testors Gloss Coat because of my difficult problems with Future (I don't have the muse everyone else seems to have) applied over a really smooth surface (down to 1500 grit). But I'm on the Klingon D-7 now, and I'm going to give the Future a go.
Good luck.
Alan
"How do you know I'm mad?" said Alice.
"You must be," said the Cat, "or you wouldn't have come here."
"You must be," said the Cat, "or you wouldn't have come here."
Thanks for all the replies. I had assumed (my bad...) that putting the decals down on gloss paint without a gloss clear coat would have been sufficient.
Live and learn. It was a good thing this was mostly a test build anyway. It makes a nice 6 foot model, but taught me a lot of the issues involved with building this kit.
Next go-round gets several gloss coats polished to a high shine before putting on the decals.
Live and learn. It was a good thing this was mostly a test build anyway. It makes a nice 6 foot model, but taught me a lot of the issues involved with building this kit.
Next go-round gets several gloss coats polished to a high shine before putting on the decals.
- Romulan Spy
- Posts: 1897
- Joined: Thu May 06, 2004 4:44 pm
- Location: Grand Duchy of Robonia
-
- Posts: 638
- Joined: Wed Oct 12, 2005 1:58 pm
- Location: Toronto Canada
- Contact:
My decals also didn't seem to react to Solvaset but if I put some down before putting the decal on it eventually softened the decal enough to make it conform to curves. It was a long process for each decal.
I put my decals over a white semi-gloss paint and they actually didn't silver. I was surprised as I was thinking the silvering would add to the overall effect but nothing happened.
Yes the R2 decals seem to the hit or miss. My 1:1000 Ent-C decals cracked like crazy while the 1:1000 Ent-E decals were fine. Ent-E decals also seemed to laugh at the Solvaset
I put my decals over a white semi-gloss paint and they actually didn't silver. I was surprised as I was thinking the silvering would add to the overall effect but nothing happened.
Yes the R2 decals seem to the hit or miss. My 1:1000 Ent-C decals cracked like crazy while the 1:1000 Ent-E decals were fine. Ent-E decals also seemed to laugh at the Solvaset