More news. And why no one mentioned it, I don't know. Or maybe they did, and I was too dim to notice.
Anyway, I'm finishing yet another plane with the "Polycrylic and Rustoleum" method, and I'm getting very frustrated with the whole problem of the Polycrylic and talc mixture being clear. Clear meaning, in this case, that you simply cannot tell when you're about to punch through your primer coat into bare wood. You just know when it happens -- and then it's too late.
Now, I'm all too prone to sanding down to bare metal (or whatever) as it is. I'm a menace in the paint shop, because after the primer goes from gray to undercoat color, I tell myself "I can sand this down just a bit more" -- and then it goes from undercoat to silver. Oops. So I need any help I can get.
So, being me and totally unable to do anything directly, I start by saying "how can I doctor up this Polycrylic stuff
even more to make it like primer?". So I go out and look around for pigment powder. And I find it! I find it on a soapmaking website, I find it on a home paint-making web site, I find it on a home-cosmetics website, etc. (paint! note that the light has not dawned). Then I tell myself "no, I am not going to worry about this any more, I am not going to flog the finish on this Flight Streak any more, I've given Mark Scarborough too much ammunition to convince Randy Powell that I'm demented as it is. I'm just going to stop this nonsense, squirt Rustoleum primer (primer!! -- note that the light has not dawned) on this thing and accept the rough spots where it's over bare wood.
Then, as I'm drifting off to sleep, I think . . .
PRIMER!!! By gum, if you can get all the stuff to make acrylic primer for things other than fine art, surely someone makes it. Finally, the light dawns.

I have to get up and do a web search before I can go sleep, but from there it's just a hop, skip, and a jump to the Miller Paints web site, where I find that I can get a quart of acrylic primer already made up and tinted and everything. Dang but I'm stupid.
Anyhoo, I've got the Fright Streak painted up with white primer (calm down, Mark: I'm not trying to make the
plane better, I'm experimenting with a cheap paint job with a plane where
it won't matter if I go for my first official flight of the Spring Tuneup and have the entire paint job on the fuselage go "floop!", peel off as one piece, and flutter onto the judges score sheets -- because it's just a Flight Streak, anyway). It'll get two coats today, and then sometime tomorrow I can see how well it'll sand (and Mark: it's
not a good thing because the plane may look better (assuming I have enough self control to not sand through the bare spots), it'll be a good thing because I will be
advancing knowledge).