drodg Posted December 10, 2019 Posted December 10, 2019 So here in the next week or so I am going to start building my Jo Han 69 Roadrunner. The emblems on the doors and the rear trunk need to be chromed either with Bare Metal Foil or a Molotov pen. I have read an article on how builders will bare metal the emblems after priming but before painting and then rub the paint off the emblems after the paint sets up. Have any of you builders tried this? I have never done that before but because of the amount of emblems on the Roadrunner I want to try it if it works. Thanks for tips or help.
GeeBee Posted December 10, 2019 Posted December 10, 2019 I've done it a few times, works very well,sometimes I use Tamiya's triangular cotton buds dampened with a little lacquer thinners.
drodg Posted December 10, 2019 Author Posted December 10, 2019 1 hour ago, GeeBee said: I've done it a few times, works very well,sometimes I use Tamiya's triangular cotton buds dampened with a little lacquer thinners. Thanks! That is a good idea. So where the bare metal is around the letters the paint keeps the foil down?
GeeBee Posted December 10, 2019 Posted December 10, 2019 2 hours ago, drodg said: Thanks! That is a good idea. So where the bare metal is around the letters the paint keeps the foil down? It does....
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 (edited) That's the way that I do nearly every model. It is often referred to as the "foil under paint" or "foil before paint" technique. As a matter of fact, I think this technique is about due for it's own "initialism".......FUP. Steve Edited December 12, 2019 by StevenGuthmiller
R. Thorne Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 Steve, every time I see that Ford, I think “that’s not a model, that’s a real car”. Beautiful work.
drodg Posted December 11, 2019 Author Posted December 11, 2019 I never heard of it until a few weeks ago. I will be trying it here soon as I finish up my current nightmare kit! Thanks guys.
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 6 hours ago, crazyjim said: I BMF even before priming. That will work depending on how many coats of primer and paint you use. I use as many as 5 primer, and 5 color coats. That's way too much paint to remove in the end. I wait until right before my last coat or 2 of color. Steve
drodg Posted December 11, 2019 Author Posted December 11, 2019 10 minutes ago, StevenGuthmiller said: That will work depending on how many coats of primer and paint you use. I use as many as 5 primer, and 5 color coats. That's way too much paint to remove in the end. I wait until right before my last coat or 2 of color. Steve Steve thanks for that. So I am also doing a black out on the hood so I was assume I would bare metal after I paint the main color before I black out the hood? If you look at this 1:1 picture of a 69 Roadrunner you will see the black out hood option offered on them.
Snake45 Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 7 hours ago, crazyjim said: I BMF even before priming. Me too. At polish time, I wet-sand down to the primer, and then while polishing, the primer comes off, too, leaving lovely BMF.
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 (edited) 47 minutes ago, drodg said: Steve thanks for that. So I am also doing a black out on the hood so I was assume I would bare metal after I paint the main color before I black out the hood? If you look at this 1:1 picture of a 69 Roadrunner you will see the black out hood option offered on them. Absolutely! My biggest piece of advise is that even though you are painting over the foil, it is still highly recommended that you cut your foil as close to the script or badge as possible. Edges of the foil can be visible under the paint if you leave it too far away from the script you are finishing, especially when it only has a coat or 2 of paint over it. You might not need to worry about this as much if you apply the foil earlier in the paint process, but the less paint that you need to remove from the script, the better. The paint can then be removed from the script with very minimal effort with just a dab of lacquer thinner on a conical swab, and possibly a sharpened tooth pick dipped in lacquer thinner for the finer points. I have done it many different ways. Before and after primer, polishing or cleaning the script with thinner, and in my experience, this is by far the easiest way. Steve Edited December 11, 2019 by StevenGuthmiller
mopargreg Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 How does the Lacquer thinner not affect the paint around the script? Some of the script is very small.
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 11, 2019 Posted December 11, 2019 33 minutes ago, mopargreg said: How does the Lacquer thinner not affect the paint around the script? Some of the script is very small. Using a small conical swab, and/or tooth pick, you only wipe over the surface of the script itself, not the surrounding area. Likewise, the amount of thinner you will be using is minuscule. I dip the swab in thinner and then roll it over a cloth to absorb the excess. The swab is just damp. But with so little paint over the script, it's more than enough to remove the paint. Here's another trick. get the swab damp with thinner and lightly go over the script. Then leave it alone for a few seconds. The thinner will loosen the paint and make it extremely easy to remove. Then I take my sharpened tooth pick, dip it in thinner and use it to carefully scrape and remove the paint. Works like a charm. You don't get much smaller script size than the "H" on the Chrysler 300 H above. Steve
mod3l Lover Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 Man-o-man!! That`60 Mercury is sooo sweet!! David S.
drodg Posted December 12, 2019 Author Posted December 12, 2019 4 hours ago, StevenGuthmiller said: Using a small conical swab, and/or tooth pick, you only wipe over the surface of the script itself, not the surrounding area. Likewise, the amount of thinner you will be using is minuscule. I dip the swab in thinner and then roll it over a cloth to absorb the excess. The swab is just damp. But with so little paint over the script, it's more than enough to remove the paint. Here's another trick. get the swab damp with thinner and lightly go over the script. Then leave it alone for a few seconds. The thinner will loosen the paint and make it extremely easy to remove. Then I take my sharpened tooth pick, dip it in thinner and use it to carefully scrape and remove the paint. Works like a charm. You don't get much smaller script size than the "H" on the Chrysler 300 H above. Steve Thanks Steve this is a huge help! That Mercury and the Chrysler are beautiful.
peteski Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 On 12/10/2019 at 10:38 PM, StevenGuthmiller said: That's the way that I do nearly every model. It is often referred to as the "foil under paint" or "foil before paint" technique. As a matter of fact, I think this technique is about due for it's own "initialism".......FUB. Foil Under "B"?! "P" maybe?
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 (edited) 51 minutes ago, peteski said: Foil Under "B"?! "P" maybe? Oops. I never claimed that I could spell! Corrected! Steve Edited December 12, 2019 by StevenGuthmiller
Bills72sj Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 On 12/10/2019 at 8:39 AM, drodg said: I have read an article on how builders will bare metal the emblems after priming but before painting and then rub the paint off the emblems after the paint sets up. Have any of you builders tried this? I have once on the individual block letters on my Grand Prix restoration.
drodg Posted December 12, 2019 Author Posted December 12, 2019 12 hours ago, Bills72sj said: I have once on the individual block letters on my Grand Prix restoration. Great job.
Rocking Rodney Rat Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 My only advise about BMF is: "Don't do it". I hate that stuff. I know you didn't ask, but there it is...and worth both pennies... -RRR
Tom Geiger Posted December 12, 2019 Posted December 12, 2019 25 minutes ago, Rocking Rodney Rat said: My only advise about BMF is: "Don't do it". I hate that stuff. I know you didn't ask, but there it is...and worth both pennies... -RRR Bah! BMF is a learned skill, but skill worth learning. Ask a few of us and you will hear different techniques for applying it, but there is nothing that will replicate chrome as well. People laugh when I say that applying BMF is fun. There is no one step in the build process where you accomplish so much improvement immediately!
StevenGuthmiller Posted December 13, 2019 Posted December 13, 2019 5 hours ago, Tom Geiger said: Bah! BMF is a learned skill, but skill worth learning. Ask a few of us and you will hear different techniques for applying it, but there is nothing that will replicate chrome as well. People laugh when I say that applying BMF is fun. There is no one step in the build process where you accomplish so much improvement immediately! Agree completely!! I started using BMF probably 30 years ago and never looked back. Sometimes I wonder why some people have so many issues with using it. Even from the first time that I used it, I never really had any problems with applying it. If I had to do without it now, I would probably give up car modeling and start building ships or something. It is an absolutely invaluable tool in my opinion. Steve
Bills72sj Posted December 13, 2019 Posted December 13, 2019 8 hours ago, Tom Geiger said: Bah! BMF is a learned skill, but skill worth learning. Ask a few of us and you will hear different techniques for applying it, but there is nothing that will replicate chrome as well. People laugh when I say that applying BMF is fun. There is no one step in the build process where you accomplish so much improvement immediately! I agree. The only thing that tops a perfect application of BMF is a perfect paint job. I consider BMF one of my FAVORITE tasks.
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