Paasche airbrush bottle cap for Model Master jars?

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Callandor
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Paasche airbrush bottle cap for Model Master jars?

Post by Callandor »

Does the Paasche 1/2 oz jars for the model H airbrushes screw directly onto Model Master paint jars? I have a few 1 oz jars and I am tired of pouring paint back and forth between jars.
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Kylwell
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Post by Kylwell »

Find a Paasche lid with a bolt on siphon and transfer it to the lid from a dead bottle of MM. Did it for years with Tamiya jars.
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psytce
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Post by psytce »

The Model Master jars can be used with the 1/2 oz top, but you still have to thin the paint, and you might have to cut the plastic tubing from the 1/2 H-lid.
I used the 1/2 jar assembly with the Model master jars a while ago so I'm not sure if I had to trim the inside tube or not.

Thanks!
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davehal9000
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Post by davehal9000 »

I always just drill a hole in an extra bottle lid
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Lt. Z0mBe
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Post by Lt. Z0mBe »

Don't thin the paint in the parent jar. Don't dump thinned paint back into the parent jar. It will go bad within a matter of months. The solvent will break down the binders, leaving you with clumpy little balls of pigment and polymer at the bottom of the jar you cannot stir up.

I hope this helps.

Kenny

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Kylwell
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Post by Kylwell »

I've been thinning Tamiya in the jar for years with Tamiya thinner and have never had the issue you describe.

Then again I live @ a high altitude and very little humidity.
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Lt. Z0mBe
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Post by Lt. Z0mBe »

Kylwell wrote:I've been thinning Tamiya in the jar for years with Tamiya thinner and have never had the issue you describe.

Then again I live @ a high altitude and very little humidity.
A little bit doesn't necessarily hurt. But if you're thinning in the amounts necessary for airbrushing, the thinner will necessarily act on the binding ability of the polymers, as they become so dissolved/frayed in the solution, they cannot form the medium length chains necessary for wet paint or the long (crosslinked) chains necessary for dry paint.

In the jar, the unlinkable small pieces of polymer fall to the bottom because, again, so much solvent has acted on them and broken them down to the point they can't link up with their buddies.

On the plus side, you do get one spare mixing jar out of the deal.

Kenny

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Kylwell
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Post by Kylwell »

If you say so.... Never had an issue, usually thin about 50/50. When it gets down to some 80/20 you've got to be careful of your distance and pressure to avoid instant spiders but other than that..
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Lt. Z0mBe
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Post by Lt. Z0mBe »

Kylwell wrote:If you say so.... Never had an issue, usually thin about 50/50. When it gets down to some 80/20 you've got to be careful of your distance and pressure to avoid instant spiders but other than that..
Your Iwata can conjur instant spiders?

Kenny

www.sigmalabsinc.com


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Kylwell
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Post by Kylwell »

Yup, it's special.
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iSteve
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Post by iSteve »

Kylwell wrote:If you say so.... Never had an issue, usually thin about 50/50. When it gets down to some 80/20 you've got to be careful of your distance and pressure to avoid instant spiders but other than that..
Agreed, never had what Kenny described either, using MM acryls.
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