Avoiding masking lines when painting.
Avoiding masking lines when painting.
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Discussion

chili1

Original Poster:

435 posts

261 months

Saturday 17th March 2012
quotequote all
Hi,

I'm hoping that someone with far more experience than me can help.

I've restored a couple of 1950's tin ride on cars for my son. One I painted silver, one BRG - all straight forward. I'd now like to try something different with the 3rd one. Along the lines of Ford tiger stripes, white base with light blue/dark blue stripes. Or even Gordini stripes. I've already primered and applied white top coat.
Now comes the question, how do I avoid leaving masking lines when spraying the stripes? Is there a certain type of tape to use, feather the edges, or something else?

Cheers.


Red Firecracker

5,331 posts

251 months

Sunday 18th March 2012
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Tamiya tape is my masking tape of choice, it performs exactly as I require without issue. The 1:1 world version is called Shurtape CP-60.

Once you have masked up, spray a very light coat over the the tape to seal the edge. Then you can build up the coats in the normal manner. When you want to remove the tape, I find that removing when the paint is still wet works for me others advise differently. My advice is to test your technique on a scrap piece if material.

chili1

Original Poster:

435 posts

261 months

Sunday 18th March 2012
quotequote all
Thanks both. I'm going to make a start today, I'll use the tips you've both provided.

Cheers.

dr_gn

16,768 posts

208 months

Sunday 18th March 2012
quotequote all
I've used Montex masks for a large scale aircraft model.

The technique was to leave the entire logo covered, remove one bit of the mask and spray and let it cure, then *replace* the bit of masking you'd just done and remove the next bit, etc etc. That way there's no edge within the logo or marking.

You could apply this to an entire scheme I guess.

Blakeatron

2,556 posts

197 months

Wednesday 21st March 2012
quotequote all
Another technique is to spray a light coat of the base colour over your masking and then spray the new colour - eg, spray all white, mask, spray white gain and then spray blue, remove mask, light sand and clearcoat.