Would the REAL OD GREEN, please stand up!
-
- Sergeant
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: Burbank California
Would the REAL OD GREEN, please stand up!
I don't know how many of you customizers out there are aware of this,...but the Tamiya's OD green and Testor's Model Masters OD green (spray paints) are totally different! I mean way off. Tamiya is a dark green, and Testors quite light. Which is more true to the military OD??? I had no idea the range here. And, the bottled paint from the same company, same color, does not match 100% either...the difference here is noticable too. What's the opinion on this from you fellow painters.
"It's not the years...it's the mileage"
-
- Officer - Brigadier General
- Posts: 3567
- Joined: Tue Oct 05, 2004 9:58 am
- Location: Tulsa,Oklahoma
That is the norm with Olive Drab..
It was also true in WWII.. Two tanks that came from the same factory often had two different shades of OD depending on who/when the paint was mixed..
So, which is right??? whichever one you are using at the time..
It was also true in WWII.. Two tanks that came from the same factory often had two different shades of OD depending on who/when the paint was mixed..
So, which is right??? whichever one you are using at the time..

“The moment you think you know what’s going on in a women’s head, is the moment your goose is well and truly cooked”
-Howard Stark
-Howard Stark
From what i understand the paint color changed through the course of the week a little as it settled.
The same was true of the Piper plant producing their J-3 Cubs one painted on monday would look totally different than the one made on friday as the paint settled throughout the course of the week. This causes there to be a range thats acceptable for the OEM color in restorations.
So to the best of my knowledge there is no "correct" shade, they all fit in the correct range of colors that apeared during WWII.
I think you can prety much pick wich shade you prefer or brand like working with betterand use that as the right color.
~Jay
The same was true of the Piper plant producing their J-3 Cubs one painted on monday would look totally different than the one made on friday as the paint settled throughout the course of the week. This causes there to be a range thats acceptable for the OEM color in restorations.
So to the best of my knowledge there is no "correct" shade, they all fit in the correct range of colors that apeared during WWII.
I think you can prety much pick wich shade you prefer or brand like working with betterand use that as the right color.
~Jay
[color=red][url=http://www.surrealnewjersey.com][size=200]SURREAL NJ[/size][/url] Historical, Abandoned and "Haunted" Locations. Based in NY/NJ
[/color]
[/color]
-
- Sergeant
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: Burbank California
-
- Officer - Brigadier General
- Posts: 1739
- Joined: Wed Oct 06, 2004 7:27 am
- Location: 1, USA, AZ, Vail
-
- Sergeant
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: Burbank California
-
- Officer - Brigadier General
- Posts: 1739
- Joined: Wed Oct 06, 2004 7:27 am
- Location: 1, USA, AZ, Vail
-
- Sergeant
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: Burbank California
WW2 OD has the US standards number FS34087. That is what Testors sells. The Post Korean era OD, the darker,brownish, glossy color is FS24087. This color is known as semi gloss OD. There was a period from 1944 to 1957 when the WW2 shade OD was used, but it was a semi gloss finish. The OD scheme disappeared after VietNam when the multi colored camo schemes were adopted. During the post Korean era, the US Marines had their own green too. It was FS 34052. It had a more forrest green cast to it. The colors were fairly standard and they had to meet govt specs to be used. No doubt there were minor variations, but they had to be pretty close to specs. An interesting note is that true WW2 Olive Drab was acheived by mixing black and yellow pigments ( I forget the ratio) to get the OD color as opposed to the normal mixing of blue and yellow (remember art class when you were a kid?) to achieve green.
TJ
TJ