Airframes
Benevolens Magister
In that case, we'd better form an 'Old Fart's Club' Steve!Each to their own, but I switched to acrylics for a couple of years before reverting to enamels. My own experience is that enamels are far less likely to cause problems in the airbrush, brush paint much better than most acrylics and are much more tolerant of my approximate thinning technique.
I have the advantage of space at the back of my house where neither I nor any smells interfere with anyone else and a terrific spray booth/extractor which shifts 335 litres of air a minute to the outside. I appreciate that not everyone can be so fortunate and that the smells which are associated with enamel paints can be a problem.
I'll be using them until they ban them! I expect some overpaid and underworked eurocrat is working on that as I type
Many, many acrylic users tell me that the safest way to thin acrylic paints is with their branded thinners. You definitely don't need to do this with the enamels that I use.
Of course there is another possibility, that I'm just an old fart who can't or won't learn new tricks!
Cheers
Steve
I'm exactly the same. Apart from the (now known and recognised) few problems with Humbrol enamels over the last couple of years, I very rarely have a problem with the airbrush, unlike acrylics. Using acrylics always leads to more cleaning, as the paint clogs the 'brush.
I know a lot of very experienced, and very good modellers swear by them, but to me, they're still 'Micky Mouse', and there's no way I'll be convinced that they have the versatility of enamel or other solvent-based paints, particularly for brush painting. The only time I'd ever even dream of using acrylic paints with a paint brush, is to paint a picture, and then only if I was forced to!
As for smell and fumes, I've probably become accustomed to it, after more than 50 years using enamels, but I have noticed when, on the rare occasion I've used acrylic paints in the airbrush, I can feel the effects in my nose and throat, as if there's a coating of 'plasticiser' clogging my nose!
Oh, and bye the way Steve - check your maths! At 50p per liter, 4 liters would be £4 !! But the cost is about right - I recently b ought a 2 liter container from 'B&Q' at a touch over £3, so about £7 for 4L is about right. The price has increased substantially over the last couple of years - I paid £3.45 for 5L, according to the price tag on the container I've just finished.