An attempt to paint my GPZ 750 Tank
- HeavenlyMachines
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Then apply 2K spraymax clear. 3 wet coats with 10min in between. It dries really shiny! But with visible orange peel.
I had enough in the can to do 2 coats of side cover, and 1 coat of tail and front fender:
The clear actually hide some imperfection, but what's really bad is dust. Even one tiny dust speck shows up on the clear and I was spraying in a closed garage.
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Let the good times roll...
gpzninja.blogspot.com.au
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- Tyrell Corp
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- "You were made as well as we could make you"
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Also avoid the temptation to bake it in the sun, you could get solvent pop bubbles in the clear if you force it too much.
Finally, sand to bare metal the fuel tap gasket area and filler cap hole - petrol fumes get under the paint and causes peeling.
1980 Gpz550 D1, 1981 GPz550 D1. 1982 GPz750R1. 1983 z1000R R2. all four aces
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- ozone
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- HeavenlyMachines
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Let the good times roll...
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- HeavenlyMachines
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Tyrell Corp wrote: You can polish the orange peel / fingerprints / dust out using 1200 1500 2000 wet , then hand glaze compound.
Also avoid the temptation to bake it in the sun, you could get solvent pop bubbles in the clear if you force it too much.
I do not have an buffing tool so not really sure I want to mess with the shine? Or can it really be done by hand?
Yes, I wouldn't have any time to mess around with it until next weekend so just a slow nice curing process in the garage
If anything I learnt so far patience is the key.... I did not realise the 10 minutes between coats could feel forever!!
Let the good times roll...
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- ozone
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- HeavenlyMachines
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Duplicolor Monza Red DSF45 large can $19
Duplicolor Satellite Silver DSC65 small can $16
Duplicolor Vespers Blue DSH86 small can $16
Spray Max 2K Clear coat $46
HyStick low-stick tape $10
Fine blue masking tape $9
320, 800 grit papers $10
Body filler already had, about $12
=====================================
Total: $138
Professional paint would cost me $620 ($500 + $120 for the decals)
I don't know. If it was a really nice/historical bike like z900 I'd just do it professionally. But this bike started as somewhat a rat bike so anything was bound to be great improvement. Plus it's learning a new skills and also appreciate what work involved in professional job. Simple things like fighting dust almost makes a professional paint booth worth the money just by itself.
Let the good times roll...
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- Tyrell Corp
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panel wipe
fine putty filler
hand glaze compound
Hand finishing and compounding is ideal, buffing machines are more suited to cars. When wet sanding the clear you will see it coming off as a milky white colour. If you get colours then you have sanded through to the basecoat - Angular GPz bits harder than the more 'bubbly' curved earlier kz styling. Go really light on any edges.
If you screw it up you can key it, degrease and shoot more clear on -only after it is fully hardened. Obviously you want to use the same brand of clear.
1980 Gpz550 D1, 1981 GPz550 D1. 1982 GPz750R1. 1983 z1000R R2. all four aces
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- HeavenlyMachines
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The shine is deep, feels smooth and 'fluid'. I am sold to 2K paint now ! .. but still don't like the health risk.
There are iso-free 2K clear on the market such as this one. I wonder if it's a great & safer alternative. If so I might just invest in spray gun
www.hichem.com.au/htmlfiles/trade%20auto...20repai/2Kclears.htm
Let the good times roll...
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- Kidkawie
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1975 Z1 900
1994 KX250 Supermoto
2004 KX125
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- MDZ1rider
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The difference between a good paint job and show quality paint job starts after the clear coat is dry. Careful fine grit (1500 - 2000)wet sanding and polish bring out that mirror finish. It can be intimidating to start sanding your nice glossy finish. The trick is knowing when to stop and having the confidence that the polish will bring the gloss back . As mentioned, you are OK as long as the sanding color is a milky white. However, it's to late if you start seeing base color, because you've already sanded thru.
If you do decide to try it, sanding will show just how bad the orange peel is. The high spots will be flat or dull and the low areas will be glossy. Your first response will be that you've ruined your paint job. As you progress, the glossy "valleys" will become smaller as you level the surface. Ideally you want to sand until they are all gone, with flat even finish. You're now ready to polish back to a high gloss. You may want to work a small area and intermittently polish to determine the acceptable level of sanding finish you are after. Better might be good enough. I also cheat a little. It's hard to notice orange peel on small areas or sharp bends. That's also the easiest place to sand thru. Minimize sanding in these areas. Concentrate on the larger flatter surfaces where the reflection will be most obvious.
An electric buffer will make the polishing job quicker. A Dual Action or DA is best for novices like us. True polishers take some skill not to burn the paint. However, you also can do it by hand. Polishing compounds are probably sold from the same place you bought your paint.
Either way, you can be proud of the job you've done. It's up to you what level you want to go to.
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- HeavenlyMachines
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I think I will just enjoy it for a while. Anything better from this will require me to buy buffing tool. And by that time I would try to use acryllic clear etc... something to do in summer not rainy winter.
Indeed the more I delved into a topic the more there is to learn. I knew that car paints have orange peel from the factory... but I did not know that European orange peel is different than Japanese ones. And that Mazda has the worst orange peel there is!!!
So perhaps sometimes in the future I'd buy one of this "ANI R150" mini gun and start painting stuff with acryllic or iso-free clears. Sounds like a great hobby when the weather is good.
Let the good times roll...
gpzninja.blogspot.com.au
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