Here you are a couple of months into a project, or in my case a couple of years,
and it is finally time to start painting. You have this great paint scheme in
your head, 7 colors and letters everywhere, and you are about to embark on an
endless sea of tape and masking paper. All of a sudden your tricked out 7 color
scheme goes down to 2 colors and some clear and you get your plane done and in
the air. Later after the fact you always look it over and think "I wish I had
gone that little extra step." The above scenario has happened to me many times
in the past. Luckily Bill Wilson and Brad Walker turned me onto a very quick way
of painting a plane, FORWARD MASKING.
We have all heard of back masking.
You apply tape and masking paper all over the plane then paint on a color. Then
remove all the tap and masking paper and then tape and over the color you just
painted and paint the next color. Then repeat continuously until you applied all
your colors. This takes hours upon hours of work that can easily be avoided by
forward masking your model as you paint.
First off you need to purchase a
Hand-Masker made by 3M and sold at Home Depot. It applies masking tape to brown
paper as you pull the paper off a roll. It is one of those tools you buy once
and then wonder how you ever made it without one. It is awesome and real time
saver. Plus it is designed with any masking job in mind. Painting a car, your
house, or staining cabinets. If you need to mask off something this tool will be
in your hand.
I need to tell you that I use base coat clear coat
automotive paint exclusively. It is easy to work with and can be used in just
about any weather condition and its bullet proof when it comes to sun exposure
water exposure and yes raw fuel exposure. Granted you don't want to soak your
plane in it but it can withstand fuel very well.
Now let's get started.
You have a paint scheme in mind, think of the trim colors first. These will be
applied first instead of last. You will be working backwards from how you
probably have always done it, unless of course you already know how to forward
mask. On my most recent model it was red white and blue with silver as the
separating color or trim color. I have the plane sitting there in primer. I fill
the gun with some silver and paint in the areas I know where the silver lines
will be. Then I take 3M 1/4" blue tape and lay down the pattern I want to show,
or be the final trim lines on the plane.
Next, I pick up the white. I
know the top half of the fuse is white. I paint on some white all over the top
half of the fuse. Yes, there is white getting on the rest of the fuse but it is
really not that much to worry about. Let that white flash off for about 20-30
minutes and grab the hand masker and cover all the white area of the plane up to
the tape that I laid down to leave a silver trim line.
Then I put some
red in the gun and shoot red all along the center of the fuse and the cowl. Yes
a little bit of red is on the lower fuse but as I said before it is minimal. Let
this flash off as well. Then grab the hand masker and cover all the red area to
the next tape line that hides the silver trim color. I left the white area
covered up as well and just let the next mask cover it up as well.
Now I
load the gun with blue. Paint the wing, flaps, elevators, and lower fuse. This
takes a while due to the large area being painted. Once it is flashed off I grab
my stencils I had cut at Penn Industries in Dallas. I pull the backing and place
them in their designated areas. Grab the hand masker go all the way around each
of the stencils to cover up the blue which is the rest of the plane. You can see
from the photos it is just a big paper and tape blob on the paint stand. Put
white in the gun and paint the stencils. This takes a few coats going over dark
blue but it covers.
Now the fun begins. Start removing tape and paper
and stencils. If the stencils and or tape seem to be stuck to the plane use a
hair dryer to heat them up and it helps to release the adhesive. I do this when
pulling any tape or stencil from my planes. Just very quickly pass over it with
the dryer. Just enough to give it a little heat. I saw Windy doing that on a
video and I have done it ever since and I have minimal troubles with peeled
paint. That is another priceless tip you learn along the way. Remove the tape
and paper in reverse order of how it was applied.
Stand back and admire
your creation.
In the photos you see here I have about 9 hours in it from
primer to where it stands right now. That means from the moment I turn on the
shop light to the minute I turn it off, clean up and every thing. I have to work
around children's nap times and they usually give me a three hour window during
the day time. I started on a Friday night at 9pm worked until 12am. Then
Saturday from 12pm to 3pm and Sunday from 12pm to 3pm. You can see from the
photos it is a fairly simple paint scheme so it shouldn't take very long. But if
I had wanted to add colors to the wing and tail it would have only taken a few
extra properly placed pieces of tape and I would have had multiple colors all
over the wing as well. I personally think simplicity with good color choices
makes for a very attractive paint scheme. I can take no credit for this scheme
as I ripped it right off the real Furias Reno air racer.
I still need to
do some checker boards on the nose and paint the canopy. I had a senior moment
and forgot to paint the canopy. I usually don't paint them so that is why I
missed it. I should have painted first before the trim lines. Then I would have
covered it and then painted with the silver and so on. Now I have to go back and
mask around it and cover the plane and so on. I also have to add clear.
I would say I probably have another 3 to 4 hours to go and it will be in
clear. I think it isn't that bad when full blown paint job can be had in just a
few short sessions.
This process is insanely simple and the amount of
time it saves is priceless in my book.
I can't thank Brad and Bill enough
for teaching me this simple method. I hope it helps you as well.
Doug Moon




