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Thread: The Army Painter Spray Primer

  1. #11
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    I've had great results with the army painter black, but I'm leaning back into the GW paint, mostly because that's what I can get here in College Station and because I know it works. I might try rusty-o's in the future, but atm I'm about to work on stuff that is mostly black anyway so the color consistency helps.

  2. #12
    Senior Member Psyberwolfe's Avatar
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    If you don't have an airbrush than Dupli-Color Sandable Black/White/Grey is aces. It sprays liquid smooth in most of our terrible summer conditions. I will say CRP's advice is spot on for getting good results with spray cans. If you have an airbrush than Vallejo Surface primer is rock solid.
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  3. #13
    Senior Member cody's Avatar
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    I honestly feel like vallejo isn't as scratch-resistant as rattlecan primer.
    But it's a hell of a lot easier to work with.

  4. #14
    Senior Member Psyberwolfe's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cody View Post
    I honestly feel like vallejo isn't as scratch-resistant as rattlecan primer.
    But it's a hell of a lot easier to work with.
    You have to let the Vallejo cure before you start painting. We're talking 24 hours.
    póg mo thóin
    If I tell you, "You're wrong," you'll need to click this.

    Does anybody else find it odd, by the way, that the information age has led to language becoming an oblique and imprecise tool where even the most straightforward phrasing is pored over with chicken entrails and bone tossing to divine the true meaning?

  5. #15
    Senior Member cody's Avatar
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    I usually do a light dusting of black, then full coverage of black, then zenithal white, then let it sit until the next day. I still have issues with stuff scratching off from foam storage.

    Do you let the just the initial light dusting of primer sit overnight?

  6. #16
    Member GlassJaw's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cody View Post
    I usually do a light dusting of black, then full coverage of black, then zenithal white, then let it sit until the next day. I still have issues with stuff scratching off from foam storage.

    Do you let the just the initial light dusting of primer sit overnight?
    Cody, that sounds like an awful lots of primer to me. You don't really need more than one light-to-average coat of primer, especially black. I found black primers go on a lot thicker (and are more "fuzzy"), which can obscure details of the model and makes painting more difficult. It's also more difficult to go dark-to-light than light-to-dark.

    In addition, most primers should dry fairly quickly, assuming you are priming in the recommended conditions (which admittedly can be difficult around here). For example, the Dupli-color I mentioned will literally be ready in an hour, assuming you haven't put a ton of primer on. You don't need a lot. Just coverage.

    If your primer is still scratching off from normal handling, it's probably because you didn't clean and wash your models before priming. I wash all parts with normal dish soap and a toothbrush post filing mold lines but before assembly. The models are coated in a "dust" of sorts that's used to remove them from the molds after casting. That residue makes the "bond" between the primer and metal less stable.

    Clean your models. It's seriously one of the most important steps when building and painting. It will also make the glue bonds stronger when assembling.

    Hope that helps!
    Last edited by GlassJaw; 11-13-2013 at 12:15 PM.
    Chris (aka GlassJaw)

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