PRU BLUE? The P-38 on the cover of FSM this month is painted PRU blue. What color is that?
Eh, never mind, I found it. It's an RAF color? Hmmm... BTW, that's a really cool P38 on the cover!
John P
06-07-2007, 08:59 AM
Except US F-5s weren't painted PRU blue, they were painted a custom-shaded "haze" camoflage.
Close enough, though, I guess.
ModelMaster has PRU blue in their enamel line, if you need some.
Thanks John (and thanks for not admonishing me for calling it a P38). I've never airbrushed enamels, don't want the cleaning hassles and fumes. I wonder if there is a mixture chart anywhere or an acrylic version?
John P
06-08-2007, 09:24 AM
Heh. And I hate airbrushing acrylics 'cause I'm afraid they'll dry inside the airbrush and clog it up.
To itch his own. ;)
The thing about acrylics is, when I get done spraying, I run some rubbing alcohol through it, cleans any and all acryls.
John P
06-08-2007, 03:53 PM
I do that too on the odd occasion I spray acrylics. But laquer thinner dissolves any and all enamels in a snap, even long after they've dried.
And the fumes haven't affected you one bit......
John P
06-09-2007, 10:10 AM
'Course not! :freak: :tongue:
i agree with john, i use laquer thinnner for my airbrush and it cleans them great. i have tried to use extender for acrylics to help them dry slower but am still favoring enamals for spraying.
Tamiya is such a nice quality acrylic that I've never needed anything else.
i knew i saw it somewhere but i finally found it. in the sept 2004 issue of FSM theres a 4 page article on haze paint and there were u.s. p-38s that were painted British PRU blue over all while in britain. so you could use pru after all and be correct.
hope this helps
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