T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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373.20 | Electric sprayer? | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Tue Jan 02 1990 13:07 | 16 |
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This is a really old note, but I'll bring it back to life...
Has anyone ever used an electric paint sprayer? I intend to rub
down and repaint the alloy wheels on the Marcos in the coming months
and consider that the cost (and varying colours) of spray cans is
not the ideal solution. I know that most people use compressed air
sprayers working off a compressor (run on what?.Electricity?), but
I have recently seen an electric paint sprayer (at the seemingly
giveaway price of �30) which would seem to be a better idea than
the cans, but without the high price of a compressor and the like.
Anybody got any experience of these or any genuine reasons that
you can think of against it (other than it seems too cheap!)?
Mark
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373.22 | My experience fwiw... | VANISH::BROWNM | | Tue Jan 02 1990 13:46 | 38 |
| I've used an electric sprayer (Burgess) many years ago on my Father's Rover
100, so that dates it a bit.
They are reasonable and you'll get a better and chaeper finish than with
aerosols. The finish is quite orange peel but you can improve on that with
1200 wet and dry followed by T-cut and polish. You need to put a lot of paint
on and not remove it all with the polishing. I believe Rolls Royce used this
sort of approach.
Compressed air spraying is relatively easy and you can hire the bits. the
compressors are either electric or petrol and you need around 10 cubic feet per
minute. I've never managed to get a really good quality finish without
polishing afterwards - the paint shops seem not to need to do this yet can get
a mirror like shine.
You'll need a warm workshop. Fans are not a good idea as they stir up too
much dust. Try a (hired) gas radiant heater or similar. You can try wetting
the workshop floor but it will probably evaporate before you're finished!
A word of warning. Paint is toxic and the spray gets everywhere. Wear a
mask. It is very persuasive to see how much paint ends up in the mask filter.
Do not try spraying acrylic or two pack paints - they give off cyanide
gasses and you need breathing apparatus. You can get different types of
celulose thiners with different rates of evaporation and anti-bloom
characteristics (bloom is where the paint goes dull greyish due to moisture in
the atmosphere).
As it happens, I have recently bought an electric 15cfm compressor and
(cheap) spray gun so I'll be practicing. I bought it mainly for air tools.
Incidentally, the manufacturers seem not to be using air any more - they use
airless means, possibly piezoelectric nozzles, to atomise the paint.
Good luck. I'll be interested to learn any tips you pick up.
Cheers,
Mike.
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373.23 | | GVA01::STIFF | Paul Stiff, EHQIM-OIS DTN:821 4167 | Wed Jan 03 1990 10:57 | 15 |
| I resprayed the front of my Volvo 1800S about 5 years ago with a
500w electric spray gun. The results were actually quite reasonable,
considering I sprayed outside, and in a not very clean atmosphere.
I did have quite a lot of runs though, as the electric gun tended
to put on more paint than I wanted.
I would say that the safest bet is to rent the equipment - compressor
and all. If I remember correctly, the Halfords in the outskirts
of Basingstoke rents this stuff.
It really all boils down to technique though (I had the Volvo resprayed
2 years later...)
Paul
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373.24 | Old methods...before spraying..? | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:28 | 14 |
| What about this new brush-on stuff, apparently it is really good, as it
has something in the paint that lets the brush marks run into each
other. I thought it was a con at first, but in the summer at a VW
rally, I saw a Beetle which the owner had done in this paint, It was a
weekold paint job, which had just been washed and waxed, nothing else,
There were no brush marks, until you got up to 3 or 4 inches away!,
then they were only V.small. Bearing in mind he had neither t-cut, or
wet and dry-d the paint yet it was exellent.
Apparently the cost, including 2 quality brush's, paint, thinners etc,
was �30.
Carl.
private car which the owner had
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373.25 | Hand Painting? Now there's an idea. | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:47 | 15 |
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Re .24
This sounds interesting. Does anyone know anymore?
Re Electric Sprayers.
I was in the Basingstoke Les Smith's today and they had 4 or 5
different electric sprayers (none the same as the one I'd seen before).
So there are obviously a fair selection of these things on the market.
I may well invest in one anyway. You never know when a paint sprayer
might come in handy.
Mark
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373.26 | Hmmmmm, CURRNT? sounds familiar to me.. | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Wed Jan 03 1990 13:58 | 12 |
| RE-1, where are you located, as that node sounds familiar, I am in the
Crescent B'stoke, ground floor, block A.
I have the garb for the brush on stuff at home somewhere, I will see if
I can find it tonight, as I think I have a colour chart for it
aswell (somewhere).
RE- Electric paint sprayers, warning, I tried one 2 years ago on my
Honda N600, The quantity ejected from these things make them almost
impossible to handle, paint went everywhere too fast, and too thick,
spent hours taking the stuff off again!
Carl. (7781-4268)
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373.27 | The noise from electric sprayers is defening!! | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:15 | 1 |
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373.28 | | ANNECY::MATTHEWS | M+M Enterprises. Thats the CATCH | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:22 | 6 |
| Isn't the brush on stuff called CARPAINT or some such.
For wheels I would imagine it would be just the job.
Also, isn't "coach paint" the same sort of thing ...
Mark
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373.29 | Practice makes fairly good... | VANISH::BROWNM | | Wed Jan 03 1990 14:31 | 8 |
| With good electric sprayers, you can adjust the quantity emitted. It's also
important to get the viscosity right - you can buy viscosity cups cheaply and
follow the paint manufacturers recommendations. Avoiding runs is a matter of
practice, moving the gun at the right speed and starting and stopping spraying
while the gun is moving, not at the end of a stroke. Temperature also helps
as the thinners flash off faster.
Mike.
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373.30 | Electric Air | VANILA::LINCOLN | Reality is not what it seems | Mon Jan 08 1990 17:57 | 10 |
| The sprayer I used for my restoration work was an 'Apollo'
which is an air sprayer that doesn't use a reservoir, just
pumps the air up and uses it. The results are just like a
compressor based air system but you do need to use more
thinners than normal.
It's still gathering dust at home somewhere. Could lend/hire/sell
I suppose.
-John
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373.31 | First decide on team colours! | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Thu Sep 20 1990 16:36 | 20 |
|
Since it looks like I may be in for an enforced 'holiday' in a week's
time, I'm thinking of tackling the paint on my Landy. (Derek wants it
done in the team colours!, and anyway its present colours are so
distinctive that the old owner doesn't want to be accused of being
where he wasn't!)
It is currently household outdoor gloss painted over the original military
green. I used Nitromors to get the colour off the inside seating box,
and that was hard work - the gloss came off without too much trouble,
but the military green stayed in very stubborn patches. Has anyone any
better ideas for preparing it for repainting?
I will probably brush paint it - the local car parts shop suggested
using outdoor dulux, mixed with clear varnish. Comments anyone? Should
I try spraying it?
This work will have to be done outside as there is something else in
the garage! (Not that the Landy will fit in anyway)
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373.32 | Elbow Grease and Yacht Enamel | NEWOA::VANDIK::HENNEMAN | Westfield VAN Driver | Thu Sep 20 1990 16:54 | 31 |
| For any bits of old Army paint that won't budge, the only answer is to rub it
down with a sander or by hand until you've got a smooth, flatted surce for
painting. If you've got bare alloy then use an etching primer first, otherwise
the paint will vanish rapidly in large flakes the first time the panel flexes.
I wouldn't go anywhere near Dulux, Crown or the like. In spite of what the
manufacturers say, all these gloss paints fade/degrade quickly when exposed to
sunlight (why else do you have to paint the outside of the house every few
years!). The other problem is that most of these companies change their colour
card every year, so when you want to touch up that scratch in 12 months time
you end up having to repaint the vehicle.
I'd go for International Yacht Enamel (or if you're really flash - use their 707
2-part epoxy paint). These paints are especially formulated for harsh outdoor
environments (try ocean racing for a good test), use much more pigment than the
likes of Dulux, and only change their colour card every 15 years or so. Any
boatyard stocks their range, from self etch alloy primers, to undercoats and
enamel topcoats, plus all the various bits in between.
I painted my narrowboat with International Enamels 10 years ago, and it's still
looking pretty good today. I used an ally faced ply on the superstructure sides,
so painting this is not much different to the Landy.
The order of painting was
1 coat self etch alloy primer
2 coats alloy primer
2 coats undercoat
2 coats yacht enamel
Dick
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373.33 | | ANNECY::MATTHEWS | M+M Enterprises. Thats the CATCH | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:10 | 16 |
| What about using coach paint. Not exactly sure what this is, but
I was told that it is THE thing to use (or was a few years ago).
It is long lasting and leaves no brush marks. It is advisable to
paint in a warm environment, but would also suggest it is well
ventilated ...
The only problem you might have is painting it on over the old
paint is will it stick and not pull off the paint underneath ???
This I don't know either ...
When I had the MG bare-metal resprayed, the chap got the old paint
off using brake fluid. I would have thought you would be rather
well placed to get hold of some of this :-)
Mark
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373.34 | Any colour you like as long as .... | VOGON::KAPPLER | | Thu Sep 20 1990 17:43 | 4 |
| Of course, if you fance BR Blue, I could let you have some of the stuff
the paint their locomotives with. (Yes, they brush it on!)
JK
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373.35 | | OVAL::ALFORDJ | Ice a speciality | Thu Sep 20 1990 18:04 | 2 |
|
how about smooth Hammerite ?
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373.36 | Brush it on? | CRATE::SAXBY | Time to say something contentious! | Thu Sep 20 1990 18:24 | 11 |
| Coach paint and CARPAINT is very similar.
The idea is that it runs together to disguise the brush marks.
Carl of the VW fame used some on his car and wasn't awfully impressed
originally, but maybe some T-cutting has revised his opinion? I have
a copy (care of Carl) of a very positive article about this stuff.
It certainly seems cheap enough.
Mark
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373.37 | I've never _seen_ any Farrari-Red trains | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Fri Sep 21 1990 09:44 | 11 |
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Yes, we've got plenty of brake fluid! - but my brother suggested _not_
using it as a paint remover, because it leaves an oily film on the
metal. - I suppose I could then scrub it down with Jizer.......
Derek, how do you fancy BR Blue for team colours? :-) Thay don't have
any Farrari Red paint, do they John?
I was thinking of using the Smooth Hammerite for the inside, - but I
don't think they do many colours, do they, I've only seen black and
white.
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373.38 | | MCGRUE::FRENCHS | Semper in excernere | Fri Sep 21 1990 09:45 | 4 |
| You should never use an electric sander (attachment) on Landrovers. Apparently
it will go through the alluminium if you are not carefull.
Simon
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373.39 | Excuse the brackets! | CRATE::SAXBY | Time to say something contentious! | Fri Sep 21 1990 09:49 | 9 |
|
Smoothrite is available in a large range of colours (Reds, Blues,
Greens, Yellow (I think. You just have to go to a shop which sells
a decent range of the paints.
Some Les Smith's seem to carry a good selection, or failing that
contact the makers for a colour chart and order direct from them.
Mark
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373.40 | Some thoughts of an ex restorer | HAMPS::LINCOLN_J | Where sheep dare | Fri Sep 21 1990 14:00 | 17 |
| Well I suppose a Landrover is just about the only vehicle
where you could get away with hand painting.
I would go along with Dick's suggestion to use yatch type
paints since these are undoubtedly better than car stuff (at
a price mind you).
Any paint that withstands a proper dosing of paint stripper
is probably so well stuck as to not justify and further effort
in it's removal so just leave it, or are you trying for the
concours d'elegance.
Personally I would not recommend any form of hammerite for any
purpose whatsoever.
-John
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373.41 | | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Fri Sep 21 1990 15:14 | 2 |
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re 40, What have you got against Hammerite?
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373.42 | Hammerite is superb - in the right places | GRANPA::63654::NAYLOR | PP53546A N2433040 GM4GNJ IAMP and bar | Fri Sep 21 1990 16:48 | 7 |
| I have used Hammerite on chassis and suspension components and have nothing
but praise for it. However, I did go through all the right preparation
stages and put it on CLEAN and RUST-FREE (mostly) areas. Looked good,
and protected the components perfectly. Even stopped the inner wheel arches
on the E from rotting.
Brian
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373.43 | Techniques for touchup work... | FILMS::PALMER | The skiing "Racoon" | Tue Jun 25 1991 14:54 | 6 |
| Has anyone any suggestions for techniques for stone chips, using those little
touchup cans with the integral brush. The one time I tried this it looked
pretty awful. Should you use a different brush ?
Julian
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373.44 | Car Bodywork Materials (moved by mod CBH) | SUBURB::SAMUELD | | Tue May 04 1993 17:40 | 25 |
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Could anyone provide a detailed, objective perspective on mediums that
may be used in vehicle re-spraying?
eg. Twin-Pak (sp?): what *exactly* is it (one person told me it hardens
soley by chemical reaction and not air-contact, another said it
must be oven-baked)?; I've been told that it would be perfectly OK to
spray Twin-Pak over the current cellulose paint, which I find hard
to believe (if it does finally adhere, wouldn't the 'moving'
particles in the cellulose cause premature cracking?); what's the
best primer that can be used with it and what is the optimum number
of layers (of primer and non-metallic colour) that should be put on?
I saw a Cobra recently that had a bare-metal respray, but had
a couple of coats of a filler spray used before the primer. It
produced an incredibly smooth final finish, but is it really
wise to coat the whole bodyshell in this filler?
And final question - anyone know a good bodyshop, preferably
specialising in classics, near Reading (Berkshire, Oxfordshire etc
area - willing to travel miles for excellent work).
Deborah.
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