burner12 Posted September 6, 2010 Report Posted September 6, 2010 What is the best way to paint a piece using an airbrush if you don't have a turn table?
EJS Posted September 6, 2010 Report Posted September 6, 2010 What is the best way to paint a piece using an airbrush if you don't have a turn table? Make one. Cardboard, a bolt, washers, plywood for the base. I use this and just discrd the cardboard "spinner" disk when it gets to much paint on it. I can also paint several objects on different disks, leaving the object on the disk to dry and move so I can put on another disk for the next item. EJ
Ralph Nardone Posted September 7, 2010 Report Posted September 7, 2010 What is the best way to paint a piece using an airbrush if you don't have a turn table? I've never used a turntable in my years of modeling--I usually devise a method to hold the model while I paint it. I've used pencils in tailpipes of jets, I've used masking tape loops to hold a car body to the top of a spray can, I've bent up wire that I insert into the landing gear sockets, or, lacking anything else, I'll use the Mk. I hand (suitably protected with a nitrile or latex glove of course). After you've been airbrushing for a while, you'll develop methods of your own. R
David M. Knights Posted September 7, 2010 Report Posted September 7, 2010 Go to Walmart and get a cheap Tupperware turntable. Very cheap. They are usually sold for cakes. Also get a "cake keeper", to keep dust off an in progress model.
burner12 Posted September 7, 2010 Author Report Posted September 7, 2010 I've never used a turntable in my years of modeling--I usually devise a method to hold the model while I paint it. I've used pencils in tailpipes of jets, I've used masking tape loops to hold a car body to the top of a spray can, I've bent up wire that I insert into the landing gear sockets, or, lacking anything else, I'll use the Mk. I hand (suitably protected with a nitrile or latex glove of course). After you've been airbrushing for a while, you'll develop methods of your own. R Hadn't thought of that. Right now the only turntable I have is my mom's who uses it for cooking. So don't want to get paint on it. But a plastic cheap one would be great.
Mark Aldrich Posted September 7, 2010 Report Posted September 7, 2010 (edited) Depending on what you paint, you can use the cardboard idea set on top of a masking tape roll. It is only as expensive as you imagination and wallet. Edited September 7, 2010 by Mark Aldrich
LesWalden Posted September 8, 2010 Report Posted September 8, 2010 Most often I have to use my hand. A three foot model doesn't work on a turn table very well. Anything small goes on a turn table. I have some latex gloves, but never can seem to remember to use them. You can tell what I've been painting by the color of my hands.
Mark Aldrich Posted September 8, 2010 Report Posted September 8, 2010 Les, Sometimes the gloves don't even work. I get to free handing and end up spraying past the model, the glove and unto my wrist. Ya just can't win. Mark
802chrisg Posted September 8, 2010 Report Posted September 8, 2010 I don't use a turn table either. I use many things. A block of wood (piece of a 2x4) with the model sitting on it, turn as you spray. Also I hang a small piece of wire from the top of my spray both. Hang the model off of it, you can turn it as you need and it stays in place. Chris
LesWalden Posted September 11, 2010 Report Posted September 11, 2010 Mark, How in the world do you get paint on your wrist???? I've gotten it on shirts, pants and hands but never up my arm. You must be a wild man with an airbrush. Your wife probably wishes that you used the same color on the models as there is on the walls. I can only visualize the inside of your painting area. :o
Mark Deliduka Posted September 11, 2010 Report Posted September 11, 2010 I use Styrofoam cups or small plastic cups turned upside down and place my armor on them. For aircraft, I use something else. I'll have to post pics of them; they are hard to describe.
ewahl Posted September 12, 2010 Report Posted September 12, 2010 It's easy to get paint in lots of strange places when the filled color cup on your airbrush comes loose and falls to the floor, but only after bouncing off the model, the table, your hand as you try to catch it, your leg, and then the floor. The various splatter patterns would give a CSI fits (not to mention the wife if she sees the mess before it is cleaned up). :( Ed
Mark Deliduka Posted September 12, 2010 Report Posted September 12, 2010 It's easy to get paint in lots of strange places when the filled color cup on your airbrush comes loose and falls to the floor, but only after bouncing off the model, the table, your hand as you try to catch it, your leg, and then the floor. The various splatter patterns would give a CSI fits (not to mention the wife if she sees the mess before it is cleaned up). :( Ed Way to go Ed! Best laugh I've had this week!
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