it seems whenever i airbrush i wind up with dust on the model.
does anyone have a good way of wiping them down or otherwise cleaning them to avoid this? thanks.
evil dust bunnies
Moderators: DasPhule, Moderators
I have a plastic storage bin that I only use for covering painted models. If it's not upside down over a drying model, it is stored with its lid on. I rinse it out every two coats or so... I also try to keep as much air moving through my paint booth as possible.
Hope this helps
Hope this helps
The Destructo Beam is the most powerful destructive weapon ever wrought by man. It is capable of vaporizing the Earth into.........vapor.
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I have the same problem before. So everytime I use my spray booth or an area for spraying. I clean and vacuum the place. Since then no dust. Just to be on the safer side, after spraying, Store the newly paint model in a plastic container. The one I use got a rubbel seal ( Lock and Lock from Korea ). Hope this help.
- Lt. Z0mBe
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Here's what I do - and I have a verrry dusty basement.
In my paint booth, I shoot a coat of Future over everything inside it just before airbrushing. Seriously. No dust is going to escape it once locked down. That booth probably has 10 coats of Future inside it by now. Most of the time, I am shooting acrylics anyway so I can begin paiinting straightaway
Secondly, I keep the paint booth closed at all times, unless of course, I am painting.
On the model itself, I clean the heck out of it immediately before painting. I use automotive tack rags for this. I keep my tack rags stored in zippered storage bags between uses. GEt them at Wal-Mart in the aisle with the spraybombs.
While painting, I keep the model in the booth. I place it on a pedestal (just an upside down plastic ice-cream tub), covered with a shop towel that I treated with Future a while back. After I am finished with, say, the top of the model, I close the booth, let it dry completely, and then start on the bottom.
I also handle the model with a gloved hand. I just wear some of the tight weave, cotton work gloves. No lint, and no prints to make dust stick or keep paint from sticking.
These little steps have gone a loooooong way to help me with painting my models. If you don't have a booth, just use a large, dedicated cardboard box, lightly wet/Future it and use it to shelter models as they dry.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
In my paint booth, I shoot a coat of Future over everything inside it just before airbrushing. Seriously. No dust is going to escape it once locked down. That booth probably has 10 coats of Future inside it by now. Most of the time, I am shooting acrylics anyway so I can begin paiinting straightaway
Secondly, I keep the paint booth closed at all times, unless of course, I am painting.
On the model itself, I clean the heck out of it immediately before painting. I use automotive tack rags for this. I keep my tack rags stored in zippered storage bags between uses. GEt them at Wal-Mart in the aisle with the spraybombs.
While painting, I keep the model in the booth. I place it on a pedestal (just an upside down plastic ice-cream tub), covered with a shop towel that I treated with Future a while back. After I am finished with, say, the top of the model, I close the booth, let it dry completely, and then start on the bottom.
I also handle the model with a gloved hand. I just wear some of the tight weave, cotton work gloves. No lint, and no prints to make dust stick or keep paint from sticking.
These little steps have gone a loooooong way to help me with painting my models. If you don't have a booth, just use a large, dedicated cardboard box, lightly wet/Future it and use it to shelter models as they dry.
I hope this helps.
Kenny
- Joseph Osborn
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Re: evil dust bunnies
This time of year there's more static electricity to cause problems, and bare styrene seems to attract dust more than painted styrene. I've used tack rags in the past, but they can sometimes leave behind traces of wax that may hinder model paints. In the past, I've wiped bare plastic with denatured alcohol to help get rid of dust and anything else that might get in the way of the paint. You could always wet down the floor and walls before painting. That's what we used to do when painting real cars.davidlgreen wrote:it seems whenever i airbrush i wind up with dust on the model.
does anyone have a good way of wiping them down or otherwise cleaning them to avoid this? thanks.
<i>Fireball Modelworks</i>
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