My first airbrush was a Badger Patriot 105. Dual action, easy to handle, clean and sophisticated, at least for model car painting. I've used it for about 3 years and it's a fine piece of equipment, capable of doing very professional art work and model cars too. But after a while and much research, I decided that it was just too much for me. I got several decent to nice paint jobs with it but couldn't spray acrylics or Future through it. I think a good analogy would be a story that a sage racer told me when I started 1 : 1 racing. "The more complicated you make a race car with multi-adjustable suspension components, finely tuned engine and complexity of operation, the easier it will be to get everything out completely out of whack and the harder to utilize the car to it's fullest potential.
I'd read many times on the forum that people were using relatively simple design airbrushes, usually single action designs. I decided to spring for a Paasche H and I can't believe the ease with which I can spray Future now. I've tried 2 bodies so far. The first was just a test to see what techniques might work best. On the second attempt, I primed a Cobra with Tamiya white and then shot Future on it. Here's what I came up with. No buffing or polishing done yet. I'm pretty satisfied with the results so far. My advice to anyone wanting to try a airbrush, get a simple one.