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Posted

I went to the garage to spray a '67 Corvette, using a new rattle can of Testor's #1152 Metallic Red.  I shook the can for some time (producing a solid rattle) , and gave it a test "squirt", and it seemed fine.  My first pass was the underside of the hood, and suddenly the can is throwing out blobs of paint.   I re-shoke the can and tried again, and the blobs continued to shoot out.   I managed to clean the paint off with some thinner, and then threw the can away in disgust.

I've been using spray cans (for all kinds of stuff) since the late '50s, and this never happened before.  

I just ordered a can of similar color from Tamiya, which should be fine.

  • Sad 1
Posted

Don't feel bad. I have had this happen too.

Last time it happened it was an irreplaceable colour that I'll never be able to find again. 

It's lousy when it does occur.

  • Like 1
Posted

There have been a few ( at least a few) reports of bad Testors spray cans at the site here. And not always old stock. We can tack your report on to the list of unhappy customers. So it just may be that it's good to make an entire switch to the Tamiya lineup of spray cans, if spray cans are how you prefer to paint your models.

Posted

I'd never had a problem with any Testors product up until fairly recently.

It started with one can of dark red enamel that bubbled instantly no matter how you shot it or shook it or warmed it...and then the cans started leaking at the lower seam.

And then the line was slashed and dumbed down, with the excellent buffing metalizers gone forever.

With the apparent cheapening and offshoring of everything everywhere, it's no real surprise, and I refuse to buy anything Testors offers at this point.

  • Like 3
Posted

I have trown away many leaky cans o lacquer cans of Testors paint, I have some Rustoleum flat Testors that’s like water I need to toss out…..

  • Like 1
Posted
4 hours ago, Ace-Garageguy said:

I'd never had a problem with any Testors product up until fairly recently.

 

I hadn't either.......BUT.....  I had one that "sputtered" paint out, and, like BILL, had tried everything that "usually worked" (including heating the can) with all failed results.  My "complaint" tho, also includes their little square bottles of brush paint.  I have some that are 20yrs old (that were opened and resealed) that are still completely 'useable', while several of the recent purchased bottles, after a SHORT time, develop a thick "rubber film" on top, rendering them completely useless.......  Took a phillips screwdriver and poked a hole in one, pulled the "rubber plug" off the top to get to "what was hiding underneath", tried thinning it down (as have done hundreds of times), few days later, same old nonsense.  And yes, the top was sealed.......   Any ideas?????

DJ

Posted (edited)
7 minutes ago, TECHMAN said:

... Any ideas?????

Reformulation to save money or phase out "toxic" materials, resulting in a product that "goes off" quickly, in a planned-obsolescence kind of way?

It's SOP now, ya know?

Edited by Ace-Garageguy
  • Like 3

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