I have found several strange paint types.
The picture ad the previous owner gave me with the rover showed a dark rover. It looked like camo paint in a bad picture.
From what I can figure the hunting camp painted the original paint with a cheap black, and the owner before me did the camo work on the drivers side and back.
This was under the black paint. Note inside the rectangle. I wonder what this thing advertised earlier in life? It was loved once. This was original paint with a fine layer of black over it.
Fooled me...I thought it was the original paint coming out from under the black. This however was an attempt to paint OVER the black paint that was over the original limestone. Yep- three layers. After trying to wet sand off the black I noticed the black made a ring with to extremely similar colors of limestone on each side
Luckily it is only on the right rear fender because it fouls the sandpaper quickly.
After this, painting should be a breeze. The rest of the new paint looks like semi-cared for old paint.
I think the hood "bonnet" will be a low gloss or flat black.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
I love the smell of paint in the morning.
The previous "camo" paintjob came off relatively easy with a palm sander and 150 grit REGULAR sandpaper.
After base sanding I went back with a smaller piece of sandpaper over a foam sanding block to smooth out what I could. Then hand sanded around rivets and in creases.
Xylene was used to wipe the metal clean before priming.
Acid etching primer was used to get a good grip on the metal. This was wet sanded with 500 grit then 1000 grit to smooth it out as much as possible.
This picture is a little too small for any detail, but you get the just of it.
After base sanding I went back with a smaller piece of sandpaper over a foam sanding block to smooth out what I could. Then hand sanded around rivets and in creases.
Xylene was used to wipe the metal clean before priming.
Acid etching primer was used to get a good grip on the metal. This was wet sanded with 500 grit then 1000 grit to smooth it out as much as possible.
This picture is a little too small for any detail, but you get the just of it.
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