
I Like the hot screw driver zimmerit and how you covered damage areas when applying the XF-60. I would have forgotten to do this and painted everything, then kicked myself afterwards

Got it...thanks!Raminator wrote:The Panzer Putty is for masking; you can see it in the second and third pictures covering up the holes in the front glacis' zimmerit.
Allegedly it is correct out of the bottle, for 1:1 scale. I tried it on a scrap HL hull and at 1:16 it looked way too dark and green. Most folks I've seen compensate for that by mixing in Tamiya buff, I did it on my Panther A and it still maintained enough green tinge to pass as correct for me - more so than the German tanks ive seen lately in modelling magazines, where it looks like straight Tamiya buff.philipat wrote:
I always thought that XF-60 was correct by itself for Dunkelgelb. Are you correcting for sun fade? Or, is it just not quite right out of the bottle.
What question would that be Mr Ram ?Raminator wrote:The Panzer Putty is for masking; you can see it in the second and third pictures covering up the holes in the front glacis' zimmerit. Herman did the zimmerit by melting the plastic with a heated screwdriver.
Glad to see some more progress boss, and that clear coat darkening the basecoat actually answers a question I've been worrying about lately.