Justin,
Some experience!! You did the right thing of course you for sure would not have lived with it after all that prep.
To prove that I know I am correct in saying that, the last time I sprayed my cars exterior in 1989 / 90 I hired a full 7 cfm compressor and spray gun to do the job in my garage. Single stage cellulose perfect match Meissen blue.
Final coat and I caught the spray hose on the front right wing. It made a mark. I left it so annoyed. All these years later after trying to cover it its still there!! I should have rubbed it down
So yours looks fabulous now!!
Roy
Some experience!! You did the right thing of course you for sure would not have lived with it after all that prep.
To prove that I know I am correct in saying that, the last time I sprayed my cars exterior in 1989 / 90 I hired a full 7 cfm compressor and spray gun to do the job in my garage. Single stage cellulose perfect match Meissen blue.
Final coat and I caught the spray hose on the front right wing. It made a mark. I left it so annoyed. All these years later after trying to cover it its still there!! I should have rubbed it down
So yours looks fabulous now!!
Roy
The thinner from that heavy flood coat did not evaporate quickly enough but instead soaked into my previous coats of DP40 from way back when and began lifting it.
The area was just soft and loose now, I could take my nail and just drudge out a section at a time. I had to get all the damaged coating out so I switched to a razor blade. As peeled down to the stable layer it was still wet with thinner and as I pried it up it quickly dried. It was just a mess! Once got past all the solvent logged primer I had an area a little larger than the palm of your hand and about a MM or so of Step down which now included the shoulder right at the jamb which also established my hood gap.
Just a mess. Fortunately there wasn't a lot of filler here just a several layers of primer but I lost my shape and elevation with the hood as this area like all the rest was shaped in with it in place. At that moment it wasn't an option because the hood was now finished and we only had this afternoon to get the rest of the car in clear before we lost our window to safely apply it with a good bond. Rick gets all sorts of product samples through his work and in a our desperation to resolve it that afternoon he brought out this dark grey spot epoxy. I knew nothing about it but by this time I wasn't feeling right about the entire job; I just wanted to quit, take my car back home and regroup. Rick wanted to keep pushing so I entertained it but was very skeptical about any good result coming from all this haste. He knows a lot about paint but I at least have learned that this stuff simply can't be slung on and rushed in hopes of a great result; that never happens, at least not in my world. He applied it and I went about working on the drivers door issues. About an hour after application he was blocking it down. He told me to come and look at and it appeared to be leveling out nice but in my gut I just felt it was fucked. I was going to make a comment about probable shrinkage issues but realized I needed to just relax and get things back into perspective. Me and this old shitcan car were invited guests into his world and not only were we taking up his space but also his time...his day-off time. I was paying him but certainly not anywhere near his market rate. So I decided to shut my mouth and go with it. At worst it will be a spot and blend repair down the road if it turns to shit. That was my plan right up to the point where he was finished blocking and wanted me to come check it out. It looked sanded smooth and solid but as he was explaining he rubbed his hand over the area and his finger went into it like play doe.
I just started laughing, what else could you do? Unfortunately he wasn't laughing.
or B- a customer changing their mind on a color they approved from a (big) sample I sprayed for them and painting the 356 twice..on their dime.
Speedster owners, take heart! 4-cam Coupe owners, too!!! The new 'Normal' is to not be Super! Loop-pile carpeted 356s are king! High end resto guys will need to adapt to doing Schlocksters instead of Speedsters! Read here:
That will be stellar when lightly sanded and buffed.
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