very very new to bc/cc
#1
very very new to bc/cc
just trying to plan ahead, I am planning to paint my olds as a 69 hurst olds convertible, now the base colour is easy enough, I do have a few questions;
1. I plan to paint the door jambs, trunk jambs etc then assemble the fenders hood etc, and do the final painting of the car> what method do i use for the jambs? do I Just bc/cc or use single stage, then mask those areas?
2. When applying the stripes, do I clear first? mask off and apply the stripes, then shoot clear over the whole thing?
3. should I just mask and spray the 1/8th inch pinstripe? or use a stripping brush? or what to do? do pinstrippers stripe on top of bc/cc?
1. I plan to paint the door jambs, trunk jambs etc then assemble the fenders hood etc, and do the final painting of the car> what method do i use for the jambs? do I Just bc/cc or use single stage, then mask those areas?
2. When applying the stripes, do I clear first? mask off and apply the stripes, then shoot clear over the whole thing?
3. should I just mask and spray the 1/8th inch pinstripe? or use a stripping brush? or what to do? do pinstrippers stripe on top of bc/cc?
#2
If you're painting silver, I'd paint your final coat - everything, including the door jambs, with the same cup of paint, in one pass!
I've seen silver change shades from the front to the rear of the car, unless in a booth.
Then the stripes - all of them, then the clear.
Remember - the cleaner the surface before the clear, the easier the wetsanding will go!
You can come back to the jambs on the clear coat.
I've seen silver change shades from the front to the rear of the car, unless in a booth.
Then the stripes - all of them, then the clear.
Remember - the cleaner the surface before the clear, the easier the wetsanding will go!
You can come back to the jambs on the clear coat.
#3
If you're painting silver, I'd paint your final coat - everything, including the door jambs, with the same cup of paint, in one pass!
I've seen silver change shades from the front to the rear of the car, unless in a booth.
Then the stripes - all of them, then the clear.
Remember - the cleaner the surface before the clear, the easier the wetsanding will go!
You can come back to the jambs on the clear coat.
I've seen silver change shades from the front to the rear of the car, unless in a booth.
Then the stripes - all of them, then the clear.
Remember - the cleaner the surface before the clear, the easier the wetsanding will go!
You can come back to the jambs on the clear coat.
what is the working time? I am not clear on the "window" that I can paint the jambs, I really want to paint these first, then assemble the fenders etc
#4
If you do the jambs i would do bc cc, instead of using two diffrent paint systems . You can apply the stripes after your car has been buffed. You then mask it off prep and cover the car apply base and clear then sand and clear completly again if you wish to do so. You could also base it stripe it and clear it all but that does not leave much room for error. As far as striping goes mask and paint dont brush / pin stripe it.
#5
lets see if I got this straight..
If you do the jambs i would do bc cc, instead of using two diffrent paint systems . You can apply the stripes after your car has been buffed. You then mask it off prep and cover the car apply base and clear then sand and clear completly again if you wish to do so. You could also base it stripe it and clear it all but that does not leave much room for error. As far as striping goes mask and paint dont brush / pin stripe it.
Ok so that kind of makes sense, bc/cc the jambs etc then Mask them? then bc/cc the whole car, then bc the stripes, then clear the whole thing ( to bury the edge) or just clear the striping ( more like the original)
Thanks for the help, I also thought to use a small jamb gun for the pinstripe or i do have a couple of higher end air brushes..
#6
Yes mask the jambs., you can use the foam painters tape for door jambs and then you hand buff the little edge off left over from a little build up which always happens but can always be cleaned up . Yes you can clear the stripe like original or re clear to bury the edges. a detail gun works great for small stuff but when you are doing the stripes having the right amount of material helps specially when clearing.
#7
If it's not a real H\O I'd paint the gold for the stripes first, mask for the stripes, paint the white, and clear everything. It makes the stripes really stand out.
Not original, but better IMO
Not original, but better IMO
#8
Only problem with that is now the stripes will be sunken in. Its easier to sand the step out then to try to wet sand a low spot out. It will be much easier to burn through when wet sanding. If yóu lay your clear thick enough you will sand the steps out and it will be silck smooth.
#9
good thoughts
Ally I know what your saying but I need to do the jambs first then the gold then the black pinstripe then the white would be better to actually do the black p/s then gold but as copper said the clean up will be murder. I had thought about doing an evil twin h/o black body the h/o gold and red pinstripe and the gold headrest treatment on the gold interior but figured I would stick to the script
#10
Yes mask the jambs., you can use the foam painters tape for door jambs and then you hand buff the little edge off left over from a little build up which always happens but can always be cleaned up . Yes you can clear the stripe like original or re clear to bury the edges. a detail gun works great for small stuff but when you are doing the stripes having the right amount of material helps specially when clearing.
I didn't want to unmask the whole car, scuff the clear, mask again, layout and mask the stripes, paint them, and then re clear the whole car. I guess it's what you are looking for in the final result. The original stripes were painted on top and not buried like alot of show cars are.
I also like to use the 3M Smooth Transition tape over the foam for door jambs etc. A little more masking, but it works great. Hardly no edge at all. JMO
New pic's coming soon. I re painted it last winter as it was not perfect. Sorry Joe P but I added the W-30 stripes. At least it's still a Cutlass and no fake badges!!
Last edited by ziff396; June 5th, 2012 at 05:01 PM.
#12
Paint the jambs, then assemble. Mask the jambs and paint the outside as one. You could paint apart and then reassemble, but I would not recommend this for metallic colors. I had to assemble and paint the exterior because I did a 2 tone with accent stripe, so I had to line up the parts perfectly first to get the stripe right.
I sealed the whole car, laid down the red for the stripe, masked the stripe and painted the lower color, masked the lower color and painted the upper color. Then I unmasked and cleared it all at once. 3 coats of clear to cut and buff, maybe 4 just where the stripe edges are for extra insurance.
I sealed the whole car, laid down the red for the stripe, masked the stripe and painted the lower color, masked the lower color and painted the upper color. Then I unmasked and cleared it all at once. 3 coats of clear to cut and buff, maybe 4 just where the stripe edges are for extra insurance.
Last edited by ijasond; June 11th, 2012 at 08:52 PM. Reason: add a photo
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