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painting info needed.
- Pterosaur
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<---lost, but i do appreciate pterosaur and his info on painting. But since i dont know what ya'll are talkin about i dont give a crap:whistle: :laugh: :woohoo: :evil:
No big thing, Marvo; it was merely a left-field peanut gallery shot from an obviously constipated point of view, and a pretty tired one at that - that original factory paint is the be-all-end-all of finishes.
Preserving original paint is an idea with merit - but when it becomes a crutch for some me-against-the-world personal crusade, the point sadly becomes secondary to anything remotely connected to reality.
And when that slippery grip on the facts of life stoops to usurping other people's words to prop up a pointless attack, it deserves what it got - a swift kick in the ass.
Back to your paint in the next episode...
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- Pterosaur
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So you've let the parts sit in the sun a couple of days.
Here's why: rattlecan paint - I don't care whose - is always gonna be two things that mixed gun-shot paint doesn't have to be - over thinned and comparatively soft. It's just a fact - which is why it averages $5 a can instead of $40-80 a quart.
As a result, rattlecan paint will shrink more as it sets. After a couple days in the sun, there will be a noticeable change in the complexion of the job - it will have shrunk into any gaps and any major varience in contour. That's why I made a point of getting the prep work right from the beginning.
By this time, with the benefit of the sunshine, the paint is something over %98 as shrunk and as hard as it's gonna get.
And this is also the reason I'd said earlier that especially with rattlecan, you don't want an excess of material on the job - the more paint you load on, the more shrinkage will occur - and the more it will be affected by any layers applied over it - namely clearcoat. I've seen clear appled over uncured soft rattlecan paint wrinkle up like a prune due to the shrinkage of the clear. No joke.
Remember that piece of used #600 paper and those water jugs? Go get 'em.
Starting with any visible high spots, slowly contour-sand them until they work into parity with the surrounding surface. BUT GO EASY - you've got at the most a little over .001" - if that much - and once you sand through the paint, it's a bitch to fix short of another round of color shot, and no matter what, will always leave a shadow or a light spot.
If you don't have any experience at this sort of thing, might be worthwile to shoot a junk piece while doing your color shot to play with - it takes a touch.
Eventually, you want to arrive at a uniform surface contour and roughness, ready for the next layer to stick to.
As far as uniformity of color and hiding any imperfections in the the surface, this is where the buck stops - don't expect that clear is going to hide anything. If the color is off or there's a sand-through right smack behind the filler neck, then re-shoot the color layer per the previous steps.
If everything's peachy, then this is when you apply any decals, striping or two-tone if you're not going to shoot a metallic layer.
Whether or not you want to shoot a metallic layer has a bearing on the next steps, so I'll wait until you give me an idea of what you're up to before going on.
Besides, it'll give me a chance to pick up another six-pack to swill while typing all this stuff.
Post edited by: Pterosaur, at: 2006/07/23 12:02
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- kawsakiman
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someday i will be able to afford my kz habit.
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- wireman
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- Pterosaur
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Actually, it could easily be twice as long if I was to get into microscopic detail on some of the finer points, but the significant issues to this stage are covered. To get from where I left off through clearing and polish/buffing, I'm probably looking at the total being again half as long as what's already there.
That's why I kicked off the response with sly inferences about kzmarvo "not wanting much" and "in the interest of not writing a book".
None of this is rocket science, but rather common sense built up over more year's worth of expeience than I care to admit to.
Rattlecan paint suffers from the marketing hype of being "fast and cheap" - two things that a decent paint job never is - which is the largest singler impediment to decent results.
I've seen rattlecan candies somewhere, sometime, but the mfgr. eludes me at the moment. For all I know, House of Kolor may even have it, I haven't explored that part of their web site - whenever I've shot candies, it's always been gun-based....
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- Werewolfx
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Chris
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- JMKZHI
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- kzmarvo
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Watch it folks,i have sticky fingers when it comes to a nice looking set of handle bars:)
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- Draco
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Keep up posted.
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- kzmarvo
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Watch it folks,i have sticky fingers when it comes to a nice looking set of handle bars:)
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- Pterosaur
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They look pretty damn good if i do say so myself. I am leaving them sit for a week like i was told, thats some hard stuff ta do...
Okay, so the parts are in paint. Any chance of a pic or two to scope things out?
Give me an idea of what you want to do next, and I'll figure out some way of mashing it into a post.
Glad to hear you're satified with the color shot...
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- kzmarvo
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Watch it folks,i have sticky fingers when it comes to a nice looking set of handle bars:)
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