Burnt metal paint from Tamiya

Started by James Robert Feuilherade · 9 · 10 years ago
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    James Robert Feuilherade said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    Have seen Bristol radial engine exhaust rings, painted in a Tamiya colour called "Burnt metal". It looks really good, looking like typical blued exhaust metal. My local hobby shop stocks quite a good selection of Tamiya paints, but it seems not this one. Anyone able to give me the Tamiya paint number?

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    Editor said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    It sounds like it comes from one of their Weathering sets - aka "makeup boxes". They are something in-between drybrushing and crayon pastels.

    There is a set with burnt metal, and oil stain colors.
    Weathering Master D Set
    Item No:87088 
    Burnt Blue (for scorched metal look)
    Burnt Red (for scorched metal look)
    Oil Stain (for realistic brownish-gray oil stain color)

    These finishes are really easy to apply, even with the attached applicator which looks very simplistic but actually does the job.
    Hope this helps /m

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    George Williams said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    On my motorcycle kits I use gold, silver, transparent blue in various mixtures to get the colours I'm after on the exhausts, but could include some of their other metallic colours like copper to get the effect I'm after. Hope this helps.

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    Paul Wilsford said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    I do use those also. Very realistic.

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    Seamus Boughe said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    I have a mate that does a lot of jet aircraft. He is particularly fond of "Century Series" jets and any other jet that wears a NMF. He does some amazing heat staining and burnt effects using metallic colored eye shadow. Seriously! He goes to a make-up section, picks out various blues, silvers. oranges, reds, and smoke colors then mixes and blends them to achieve some extremely realistic effects. He also seals over them without any adverse effects. He also purchases the cheaply made eye shadow makeup as he states they cheaper ones adhere and blend a lot better than their more expensive counterparts. Note, I have not tried this myself so I cannot comment on the relative ease/difficulty of application or blending, but from what I have seen from the results, it may well be worth giving it a crack.

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    James Robert Feuilherade said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    Very interesting, thanks guys, will have a look. I did actually look at the transparent blue and thought trying some copper or brass mixed with gun metal and the blue might work. It sounds like I need to change perspective on the poor bad guy (not Lector, the other dude) in Silence of the Lambs, so he wasn't a wierdo puting on make up, he was painting his 1/32 Lysander exhaust! The world is not such a bad place after all!

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    Rob Pollock said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    Just a note about these and other 'specialist' pastels. The model must be stored in a dry place afterwards. General humidity affects the powders in the long term. I stored a couple of models in my garage, in boxes that were tape-sealed and bagged, and a few months later I decided to take them to a show for display. When removed from the boxes, the fine powders had clumped in dark smudges, that looked more like MIG oil-based weathering grime.

    Oops!

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    deleted said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    Its xf-56 met grey, simple as that, use a gloss black base for smooth surfaces. You can then use the burnt metal weathering on top to age the cast iron effect.

    Been using tam metallics for years

    Dan

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    David Laws said 10 years, 2 months ago:

    Graham gets the credit for this one - see Hyperscale discussion forum 11 Feb 2014 WNW Re-8 build work-in-progress

    An effective burnt metal look for exhaust pipes is achieved by spraying a coat of Humbrol Bronze and then shading the item with powered graphite - See Graham's WNW Re-8 exhaust pipes - looks pretty effective to me - gets that burnt look without the heavy rusting you sometimes also see