Jeff - That happened to me a while back while building an old Revell
Eindecker. Since that I've taken a minor decal, usually the one of the
company logo or sheet description and soak that one first. If it slides
onto my ceramic lamp shade (chosen especially for this purpose!) that
means the rest are pretty much good to go.
If it shatters (and only a couple have since), I coat it was some
Micro-Scale the I have on hand for making my own decals.
HTH,
............................The Old Timer
Ouch!
You might be able to find decals somewhere out there (eBay?). Or maybe
buy another kit for the decals (and this time spray them with clear to
make sure they don't fall apart.
Or if this kit is so very special, you could have set of decals custom
made for it.
All is not lost...
Peteski
> You build a model in a "special" one of paint job for the decals
> that came with the kit, your paintwork is beautiful, your glosscoat
> is smooth as glass, and when the decals hit the water they shatter
> into a million fragments leaving you with a "one of" model that you
> can't finish....
This seems to be a common trait, now that so much of the
decal industry has gone in the "cottage industry" direction.
Many of the airliner decals are now ALPS or laser printed, due
to the outrageous cost of the old traditional silk-screen print
method. And virtually all of these guys recommend coating
the sheet beforehand, with MicroScale decal film.
Many even suggest that you take a *sharp* xacto, and
lightly etch around each individual decal, only then
cutting them out with scissors. Many of the decal
films, though admirably thin, will not survive
"just scissors".
On a related note --- does Future work for the purpose
of the pre-usage overcoat?

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Greg Heilers
Registered Linux User #328317 - SlackWare 10.1
.....
"The way I see it, I figure the YANKEES had
something to do with it."
- Maj. Gen. George Pickett, when asked
where the fault lie for the Confederacy's
loss at Gettysburg
Jeff Barringer - 03 Jan 2006 06:08 GMT
> On a related note --- does Future work for the purpose
> of the pre-usage overcoat?
I guess it depends...
These are Monogram F-104 kits. One was the "tour of duty"
and it shattered completely. Luckily I had enough regular
decals to fudge something together. When I tried to "save"
the remainder of it's decals with a future overcoat, they all curled
up on the edges when they dried and notheing would make them lay
correctly. The other is that yellow and black Luftwaffe one. I haven't
started it yet. I am going to scan a copy of its decals so
I can print them out on my Alps printer just in case.
The last one this happened on prior was a Monogram "Chippy Ho"
F-18 and I stupidly started with the eagle graphics on the nose
and didn't make a backup scan. I had to complete it as a "plain jane"
F-18 from the spares box. I really wanted to do that one too.
Those "chippy ho" schemes are sharp.
Peter W. - 04 Jan 2006 04:26 GMT
> > You build a model in a "special" one of paint job for the decals
> > that came with the kit, your paintwork is beautiful, your glosscoat
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> On a related note --- does Future work for the purpose
> of the pre-usage overcoat?
As amazing as it might sound I'm not a Future fanactic. I walk to a
beat of a different drum.
So, I haven't tried to use it as a decal clear coat. But I suspect
that Future might be water based (like acrylic paints), so that would
make it incompatible with the adhesive on the decal paper. By
"incompatible:" I think that it will start dissolving it.
Why not just use Micro Scale Decal Liquid Decal film? It is
specifically designed for this task and at the quantity you would use
it is quite affordable.
I also sometimes load up my airbrush with plain lacquer thinner and
just hevily spray the cracked decal sheet. That "melts" the cracked
decal film back into one piece and it doesn't affect the decal paper or
adhesive.
Peteski
Yep! I bought a specialty sheet for the 1/144th Electra and they just
fell apart in the water. I just passed the whole mess along to an
airliner modeller. He has more decals than some suppliers.
Bill Banaszak, MFE Sr