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Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






Hey guys, I've spent all day painting some oldhammer Tyranids and I'm enjoying the feth out of it (maybe some pics later), but I have a bit of a problem. The white paint on my carapace has been chipping off after about 10 hours or at a rather light nick or if it falls. Can anybody recommend a varnish or some way to ensure that it doesnt happen? Thanks!
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut





Nottinghamshire

Chipping is really more about the connection between the metal and the paint itself, than something varnish solves entirely.
In future, a good primer will help with this.

For now, you want any varnish that isn't water based (acrylic) as it offers the most protection.


[ Mordian 183rd ] - an ongoing Imperial Guard story with crayon drawings!
[ "I can't believe it's not Dakka!" ] - a buttery painting and crafting blog
 
   
Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






Hrmmm. So I guess imperial primer just isn't that good, or maybe I should have used more? Any experience w/ imperial primer and metal?
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut





Nottinghamshire

Imperial Primer isn't great. I'd be surprised if it's actually a primer and not just acrylic paint.
Most of GW's sprays are mistaken similarly, but if you look, nowhere do they claim to be primers.

A Vallejo brush on would serve you better.


[ Mordian 183rd ] - an ongoing Imperial Guard story with crayon drawings!
[ "I can't believe it's not Dakka!" ] - a buttery painting and crafting blog
 
   
Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






Thanks so much buttery! I'm afraid of using sprays this time of the year for obvious reasons...
   
Made in au
Grizzled Space Wolves Great Wolf





When it comes to metal models it's really important to wash them in warm soapy water (dish soap works well) before painting them. They'll have mould release agents on them, and as you handle them you'll usually put some body oils on them as well. Wash them just before you prime them and avoid handling them between when you wash them and when you spray them.

 Buttery Commissar wrote:
Imperial Primer isn't great. I'd be surprised if it's actually a primer and not just acrylic paint.
Most of GW's sprays are mistaken similarly, but if you look, nowhere do they claim to be primers.

A Vallejo brush on would serve you better.
It's been a while since I've painted metal models, but in general if you're worried about paint chipping I can't recommend Vallejo, it's the only primer I've used so far where I've had problems with masking where the primer itself has lifted off the model.

Tamiya and Gunze both make specific metal primers, I haven't tested them but I've heard good reviews. I don't know how they compare to auto shop metal primers though.

In the past I've always just used regular spray paints on my metals and as long as they were washed beforehand, it hasn't been a problem.

How cold is it where you are? Normally in cold weather you keep the can warm (in a bucket of warm water or some such) and the miniatures warm inside your house, go outside, spray them, then bring them back in. The trick is not letting the can itself get cold. But it does depend on how cold it is outside.

For models that are already painted, a couple of thin layers of varnish should help protect them but isn't going to be as good as if you'd done good surface prep to begin with.

This message was edited 2 times. Last update was at 2015/12/20 03:53:03


 
   
Made in us
Troubled By Non-Compliant Worlds





Tamiya's metal primer is pretty much the only spray primer I'll use on metal.
For a brush on primer, I tend to stick with the liquitex black gesso.
I always have to hit a few spots after the first coat dries but it's fantastic to paint over and I've yet to see a single chipping issue after painting.
   
Made in gb
Decrepit Dakkanaut





Nottinghamshire

Ah, well, I guess it comes down to other factors. I did 110 metal Mordians and Tanith sing August with the Vallejo grey primer that states for brush or airbrush. I've been heavily using them on tabletop (mostly unvarnished because I'm a slob) and the only problems have been slight detail loss through rushing. I've not chipped one since September. Some were airbrush, many were by hand due to not having a spray area.

It does however, take a day or so to cure. It's very easy to peel off until around 18-36 hours.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2015/12/20 09:24:23



[ Mordian 183rd ] - an ongoing Imperial Guard story with crayon drawings!
[ "I can't believe it's not Dakka!" ] - a buttery painting and crafting blog
 
   
Made in au
Grizzled Space Wolves Great Wolf





 Buttery Commissar wrote:
It does however, take a day or so to cure. It's very easy to peel off until around 18-36 hours.
That's why I waited 2 days before over coating and another 3 days before masking and the vallejo primer still lifted. I would have thought it was my own error but I've heard similar complaints from a lot of people.

I just don't think Vallejo PU primer is all that tough and/or doesn't have great adhesion compared to your average spray paint (be it acrylic or lacquer or enamel) or hairy brush painted lacquer or enamel. But I haven't tried the lacquers on metals yet, the standard Tamiya and Gunze lacquers (which I love) aren't recommended for metals, but they do make the specific metal primers which I've heard good things about, but I'd want to test them myself before I endorse them.
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending




Sydney

 Buttery Commissar wrote:
Imperial Primer isn't great. I'd be surprised if it's actually a primer and not just acrylic paint.

It definitely has more grip than normal paint, I know because I used to at easter to make bunny prints through the house on the tiles - was a real pain to get off (razorbladed it), where normal acrylics would peel off like acrylics should.

Still terrible, hence using it for kids projects.
   
Made in ca
Fixture of Dakka






AllSeeingSkink wrote:

Tamiya and Gunze both make specific metal primers, I haven't tested them but I've heard good reviews. I don't know how they compare to auto shop metal primers though.


I've used the Tamiya with good results. Mr. Hobby is really good too. However, both are pretty expensive compared to the alternatives.

A friend of mine uses the tinted army painter sprays for his metal models, and is quite happy with them. Letting them fully cure makes a difference, too.
   
Made in us
Nigel Stillman





Seattle WA

I've used krylon fusion in the past and it has worked fine.


See more on Know Your Meme 
   
Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






So I used some vallejo matt varnish and it's still kinda shiny. Is there any fwar to remove the shinyness? Maybe watering down the varnish?
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending




Sydney

Shake it more and do another coat
   
Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






Will do!
   
Made in au
Incorporating Wet-Blending




Sydney

matte varnish is effectively gloss varnish with gak in it, if it comes out gloss, then you haven't agitated it enough - an upside (i suppose) is that if you now shake it, it will be EXTRA matte, as you have less varnish to matting agent.
   
Made in us
Mysterious Techpriest






Well I just did a scratch test on an Exocrine I varnished and primed w/ imperial primer and one I primed w/ vallejo and didnt varnish. The varnished one scratched easily while the well primed one didnt at all. Looks like I have some stripping to do! Thanks for the input guys!
   
 
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