This thread is probably going to be more useful to the guy who hasn't ever painted a car. Using rattle cans instead of a spray gun set up. I also kept a lot of body parts on the car.
Used painters blue tape to mask with plastic. Don't try to tack up the pastic right away. Lay the guiding edge of the tape first all around. Then tape the plastic to that. Helps keep things neat and clean line.
First, rough sand with 120 to get rid of the junk. Sanded past any gloss into paint base. I didn't sand to metal, so yeah.
I used Duplicolor Brand paint. Started with 1 heavy coat of black primer. Rough sand with 320, many imperfections remained.
Took about 10 cans of sandable primer.
Patched with epoxy (no mesh). Might I add, always pull it tight or else you're going to be sanding your ass off. This I already knew and yet still had 2 large patches that took over an hour to flatten out........never again. it happened because I mixed a larger portion of epoxy with the hardener and tried to stretch it time wise. Always mix your epoxy patch in smaller amounts and be sure to get a good ratio of hardener, not too much/too little.
I then primed again. Another 8 cans. Coated as instructed, 2 light coats then a medium wet one. Though I had sprayed homes for years so a spray gun/can is nothing new to me. All I can say is keep your hand aligned with the car body. If the top of the spray is closer then the bottom you will get ropes in the paint (high spots). A little deviation is okay, a little.
Wet sanded the 2nd layer of primer with 600g. Tack clothed.
Sprayed with Primer Sealer (grey). Roughly 6 cans per coat across the whole car. Wet sanded with 1000g.
At this point there were very few imperfections still showing. Wet sanding primer sealer changed the grey tint slightly. Making the flaws stand out, which is good.
I patched them, pulled the patch TIGHT! Kept it minimal.
Spot primed and wet sanded with 1000g to keep ra consistency.
Another 6 can coat of primer sealer.
wet sand 1000g
medium wet coat of sealer, 8 cans worth.
This is where I am at right now. She is primer sealed well. You could rub a babies bum across it with no harm, it is that smooth. When wet, the reflection doesn't appear to have any major deviations, the patches worked well. I did use a 1 foot wide blade for the first two rounds. That helped keep uniformity of the curves.
3x cases of Sandable Primer (18 cans)
3x cases of Primer Sealer (18 cans)
2x Epoxy patch
2x pack of 1000g paper
2x 600g
2x 320g
2x 220 and 120 for epoxy patch sanding heavy spots.
One thing I learned is wet sanding kicks the crap out of dry sanding. As a home painter we shunned wet sanding as it was a royal PITA for inside homes on walls. Mostly for patches, dry wall work. But with auto body it is the key.
I found keeping a running hose in one hand also made the smoothness even better. With out ample amount of water, it started to catch and bind slightly.
And always using a tack cloth. Even after dusting down with a dry towel, the tack cloth still pulled up particles that would have otherwise become rough spots in the next coat.
I also found sitting the cans in the sunlight helped the paint spread/spray better. Not too hot, just enough to get warm. Then shake the crap out of em. Gets a great mix up. Really reduces the occasional sputter known to spray cans.
After 1rd coat of Primer Sealer and wet sand
After 2nd coat of Primer Sealer
I decided to remove the masking to make sure no paint was getting past the blue tape. All was good. I also like to remove tape if there are several coats on them. Too much build up can peel paint, though I can;t say for sure with Acrylic Enamel, I've seen it on other paints.
I got a 3rd coat of sealer and it looks sharp. I'll get the pics up after I take them. Once I was done spraying I went inside, showered the grim and heat off.....sticky nasty heat this week. Can't spray in sunlight, too hot. Dusk is perfect.
I don't know when I'll get the final coat of color/clear and wondering if I should pay a shop to spray the final. I know I can do it but I also know those spray guns can spray a larger fan width and essentially lay down a smoother coat. And that they can use the lethal 2 part paint that is hard as anything I ever came across as paint.
But not until I get surface perfection......until then......she is a grey car, lol.
Used painters blue tape to mask with plastic. Don't try to tack up the pastic right away. Lay the guiding edge of the tape first all around. Then tape the plastic to that. Helps keep things neat and clean line.
First, rough sand with 120 to get rid of the junk. Sanded past any gloss into paint base. I didn't sand to metal, so yeah.
I used Duplicolor Brand paint. Started with 1 heavy coat of black primer. Rough sand with 320, many imperfections remained.
Took about 10 cans of sandable primer.
Patched with epoxy (no mesh). Might I add, always pull it tight or else you're going to be sanding your ass off. This I already knew and yet still had 2 large patches that took over an hour to flatten out........never again. it happened because I mixed a larger portion of epoxy with the hardener and tried to stretch it time wise. Always mix your epoxy patch in smaller amounts and be sure to get a good ratio of hardener, not too much/too little.
I then primed again. Another 8 cans. Coated as instructed, 2 light coats then a medium wet one. Though I had sprayed homes for years so a spray gun/can is nothing new to me. All I can say is keep your hand aligned with the car body. If the top of the spray is closer then the bottom you will get ropes in the paint (high spots). A little deviation is okay, a little.
Wet sanded the 2nd layer of primer with 600g. Tack clothed.
Sprayed with Primer Sealer (grey). Roughly 6 cans per coat across the whole car. Wet sanded with 1000g.
At this point there were very few imperfections still showing. Wet sanding primer sealer changed the grey tint slightly. Making the flaws stand out, which is good.
I patched them, pulled the patch TIGHT! Kept it minimal.
Spot primed and wet sanded with 1000g to keep ra consistency.
Another 6 can coat of primer sealer.
wet sand 1000g
medium wet coat of sealer, 8 cans worth.
This is where I am at right now. She is primer sealed well. You could rub a babies bum across it with no harm, it is that smooth. When wet, the reflection doesn't appear to have any major deviations, the patches worked well. I did use a 1 foot wide blade for the first two rounds. That helped keep uniformity of the curves.
3x cases of Sandable Primer (18 cans)
3x cases of Primer Sealer (18 cans)
2x Epoxy patch
2x pack of 1000g paper
2x 600g
2x 320g
2x 220 and 120 for epoxy patch sanding heavy spots.
One thing I learned is wet sanding kicks the crap out of dry sanding. As a home painter we shunned wet sanding as it was a royal PITA for inside homes on walls. Mostly for patches, dry wall work. But with auto body it is the key.
I found keeping a running hose in one hand also made the smoothness even better. With out ample amount of water, it started to catch and bind slightly.
And always using a tack cloth. Even after dusting down with a dry towel, the tack cloth still pulled up particles that would have otherwise become rough spots in the next coat.
I also found sitting the cans in the sunlight helped the paint spread/spray better. Not too hot, just enough to get warm. Then shake the crap out of em. Gets a great mix up. Really reduces the occasional sputter known to spray cans.
After 1rd coat of Primer Sealer and wet sand
After 2nd coat of Primer Sealer
I decided to remove the masking to make sure no paint was getting past the blue tape. All was good. I also like to remove tape if there are several coats on them. Too much build up can peel paint, though I can;t say for sure with Acrylic Enamel, I've seen it on other paints.
I got a 3rd coat of sealer and it looks sharp. I'll get the pics up after I take them. Once I was done spraying I went inside, showered the grim and heat off.....sticky nasty heat this week. Can't spray in sunlight, too hot. Dusk is perfect.
I don't know when I'll get the final coat of color/clear and wondering if I should pay a shop to spray the final. I know I can do it but I also know those spray guns can spray a larger fan width and essentially lay down a smoother coat. And that they can use the lethal 2 part paint that is hard as anything I ever came across as paint.
But not until I get surface perfection......until then......she is a grey car, lol.
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