I thought I'd start a new thread on this because of the debate and discussion that it may generate. Remember when we (well some of us) had this board debate of painted cases vrs unpainted cases. I can't remember which camp I was in but probably was the unpainted camp. Well that debate was settled years back and it is the accepted view cases were painted.
Here we go again. I've always been in the painted stripe camp as are many others. Well Gerard has brought a wealth of knowledge and opinion to this forum and I and others have never dismissed out of hand what he has ever posted. He just posted on the thread "Your Stripes are Wrong" about stripes maybe NOT being painted so I decided to have another look at this question. I armed myself with a light magnifier and 2 of the 3 original tanks I posted about a few days back. The third tank was repacked and I wasn't inclined to unpack it again.
Armed with this magnifier, camera, good light I've studied these 2 tanks, one a double wrinkle 17 litre and the other a 19 litre. All I can say is it was a most enlightening exercise as I discovered several things.
The first thing was that the front of the right side stripe is approx 47mm wide whereas the left side stripe at the front is around 45mm wide. This oddity is on both tanks and the measurements are more or less exact. This cannot be a coincidence. This oddity can not be so if striping was done manually. I just don't believe that such exact measurements can be so random with these tanks if striping was done by hand. Template yes but not by eye. The other thing is I could notice lines outside of the stripe, say about 1mm wide for the full outline of the stripe. It's not a decal line as it's too faint, but, maybe a water transfer line
??
Attached are the photos I was able to take that does shed some light on this and I'm sure will generate some further discussion. Taking photographs of what I can see with my eye is very difficult but I think I've been able to capture what I saw.
Do any of you remember the days of plastic models. I was an avid model builder through the 60's and early 70's and war planes was my special interest. In those days (the good ol days) vinyl decals were not common at all and the poison of choice in them there days was the water transfer. These model kits had a sheet of water transfers which when soaked in water came away and were easily placed on the model. Usual detail was the aircraft insignias and the name transfer I believe was used because one transferred the insignia from the paper to the aircraft using water to release the insignia from the paper. When this insignia was still wet it was placed on the appropriate area of the model and allowed to dry. You could then paint over the transfer if required.
Although not totally convinced, I'm starting to think Gerard is maybe right about this. Needs more members to comment on their findings
Just added some more photos