>>11044132Bought this specifically for painting Ukrainian military hardware.
Well, some part of the money went to help Ukraine and I got a nice souvenir piece to show for it, but the airbrush itself as a tool is not very impressive.
The good:
>0.15mm needle/nozzle (sold separately) produces finer lines than 0.18mm (not suprpisingly) and when the trigger is pulled all the way back the spray is wider than Custom Micron's>the endpiece mechanism that allows to fully release the trigger while remembering the last setting (so it can be quickly set back) is pretty convenient when cleaning>nozzle construction is similar to Iwata Eclipse (in that you can take the nozzle out easily for cleaning)>quick connect adapter is included and it's compatible with Iwata'sThe bad:
>trigger range of motion is about 30% smaller than Iwata's which makes fine control harder>trigger is not as smooth as Iwata's even with plenty of lubrication>the two-pronged nozzle cap that comes standard with Infinity is poorly designed: when the trigger is all the way back the prongs are inside the spray cone which causes the droplets to form on them (which then drip down or fly off creating a mess in either case)>some sort of notches with numbers on the endpiece would've REALLY helped (standard Infinity has them, it's just the special edition that doesn't)>the box is the cheapest, jankiest, flimsiest excuse for an airbrush case I have ever seen, and to add insult to injury the top insert doesn't match the bottom (positions of large and small cups are switched), ffs I've seen better boxes with a $30 noname airbrushes off Aliexpress, come on Iwata, do something about this shitAll in all it's an okay airbrush once you get used to it, but I would not recommend it over any Iwata (except maybe Neo or Revolution).