Aerostar wrote:1. Has anyone tried spraying Future/water mixture through a.spray bottle?
2. When spraying acrylic paints, I hear folks thinning them with thinners instead of water. Is water an issue?
3. Can anyone recommend a cheap airbursh set up that gives good results?
1. If you are going to spray, get and airbrush. Most spray bottles do not have the even, fine misting spray pattern required for modeling work. Future has been difficult to find lately in my area. I have been having better results with Armstrong ShineKeeper, an acrylic emulsion intended to restore no-wax flooring. It can be brushed, or sprayed. Full strength, it fills and seals silkspan very nicely, much better than Krylon Crystal Clear, and thinned, works very well on tissue. I have thinned it with water or rubbing alcohol with the alcohol being preferred. A half gallon of it costs about $15 at Lowe's or Home Depot.
2. There are special thinners for spraying acrylic paints, but I have not found them worth the trouble. Water is fine, also rubbing alcohol, which is 30% water anyway. When using alcohol as a thinner while spraying be careful to have good ventilation and be away from open flame.
I have also used acrylic artists inks intended for airbrush work. They cost a bit more than the paints, but are available in a great variety of opaque and transparent colors, do not require thinning. and, if you are building flying models, seem to be lighter for the equivalent coverage.
There is also a surface tension breaker for acrylic paints. You just put a drop in an ounce of thinned paint, mix, and spray. It gives the paints the flow characteristics of the inks.
All water based finish products carry a big load of water. This will make the tissue sag and is somewhat scary at first. My experience is that when the paint or ink is throughly dry the tissue returns to it's original tightness. However, if you are spraying multiple colors the first color must be absolutely dry before applying the next color, whether or not you mask. If the tissue has any sag at all when you apply the second color the ripples in the tissue will pick up the next color and give you painted on wrinkles, which can be a very interesting effect in a camouflage job but is quite inauthentic.
3. Harbor Freight Tools has inexpensive airbrush kits, both external and internal mix, that work quite well. The secret is having a good compressor. Professional airbrush compressors are quite expensive, but very quiet, and can only be used for airbrushing. You can get a utility compressor at Harbor Freight that will give excellent airbrush work, and can also inflate the tires on your car and run small air tools, for less than $100. It won't be quiet and will be strictly a garage, not apartment, tool. When they are having a sale you can probably get the compressor and airbrush kit at Harbor Freight for $100.
Hope this helps,
Howard