I've seen several people using thin tape to make panel lines, lay it down, spray with primer then remove the tape.
Should the primer be completely dry, tacky, wet?
Anyone have experience with this?
Primer panel lines
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Primer panel lines
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-Jason Ware
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-Jason Ware
---------------------------------------------------------
VISIT MY ASTROPHOTOGRAPHY HOMEPAGE!!
ASTRO IMAGES FOR DOWN-LOAD, PRINTS
http://www.galaxyphoto.com
---------------------------------------------------------
My Other Hobby....High Power Rocketry
http://www.galaxyphoto.com/rockets.htm
Re: Primer panel lines
The tape will cause a depression or step, depending on how you mask it. The primer should always be dry and fully cured.galaxy_jason wrote:I've seen several people using thin tape to make panel lines, lay it down, spray with primer then remove the tape.
Should the primer be completely dry, tacky, wet?
Anyone have experience with this?
The canopy and windscreen on this plane are vacuformed copies of the unusable kit canopy. After I made a copy, I masked off the clear sections, leaving teh frames exposed and shot the plane with primer (several times, but that was because of the kit).
The canopy itself is loose, but you can see the frames. The lower edges are rough because some paint got under the edge of the mask.
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Duct tape can be separated into strands - they've already got the adhesive on. I've seen a guy do pinstripes on a the suit of a 125mm model of Chruchill using this and it really worked.
"I'd just like to say that building large smooth-skinned models should be avoided at all costs. I now see why people want to stick kit-parts all over their designs as it covers up a lot of problems." - David Sisson