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-   -   I'm going to try to paint/prep my own car. Do I use a roller or brush? (http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/bodywork-repair-paint-tools-tips-tricks/146588-im-going-try-paint-prep-my-own-car-do-i-use-roller-brush.html)

Carrameow 02-26-2006 05:01 PM

I'm going to try to paint/prep my own car. Do I use a roller or brush?
 
I'm giving serious thought to painting my 300D 85 myself, or at least prepping it. The other day I was at the Dealer picking up automatic bushings for the shifter and I wandered over to the service department and I saw a gleaming 300D 85 that some guy owned since new, it looked like it came off the showroom floor. It was a beautiful light Blue. I was in awe--until I went underneath the car when it was up...torn ball joint bushings, rear axle boots, leaks and drips everywhere..
Anyway I dont have a paint booth, thats the first problem. I painted one car before, my RX7 with Lacquer, in a paint booth, ( see my webpage) and I wet sanded it with 600 and buffed it with finishing compund and surprised myself --after about 5 coats of wax, anyway...
I was thinking of setting up some kinda tent and doing it one panel or half panel at a time, very very slowly carefully and patiently with a mid range gun, say $300 to $350...I cant afford a new $2K paint job--I could use that scratch to buy another car..
Am I high on paint fumes? Wil my neighbors smell it and get upset? I remember previously doing lacquer was not that bad, but those fumes dont go unnoticed--an ordinary spray can will arouse passer's by with its odor..
I just want to paint a car myself once in my Life..maybe it will be terrible,..if its that bad, I will strip it and send it to Midas...PS its got to be one of the promary colors, I can't stand my gun metall silver anymore..I was thinking dark Blue or Maroon that Mercedes used that year

Any advice, pro or con?

pmari 02-26-2006 05:08 PM

The Absolute Basics For Painting A Car
 
http://www.neilslade.com/Papers/Painting.html

You'll never be happy with a foam applicator,brush or roller. Get a cheapo car port, do all of your prep now, then when it warms up, you can get it sprayed in a day, neighbors won't have time to complain. Especially if you you do it during regular working hours when most are not home.

Hatterasguy 02-26-2006 05:25 PM

You could strip it and prep it yourself and have someone spray it for a few hundred bucks. One of the guys at the marina restores SL's and had his red one painted by an older guy. The deal was the car would come ready to be sprayed. It cost about $600 and looks really good. Probably about as good as a $2k job.

I'd find a local guy doing moonlighting and have them paint your car.

boneheaddoctor 02-26-2006 05:30 PM

Use a long nap roller and use rustoleum. Will take care of theft problems too.

Carrameow 02-26-2006 05:53 PM

Theft problems.........
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by boneheaddoctor
Use a long nap roller and use rustoleum. Will take care of theft problems too.


Yeah! I didnt think of that..

On the serious side, I think all of us, with some practice and patience and determination....could do a middlin paint job we could be proud of...the trick is like they say, you got to believe you can do it to do it--so this is the process of doing that, collecting info, stripper, sandpaper, links and advice and encouragement

junqueyardjim 02-26-2006 06:00 PM

Geeeh!
 
You didn't leave much to say - you done said it all! At least if you think you can get it done with the power of positive thinking, why bother us normal people.

rs899 02-26-2006 06:27 PM

If you did OK with lacquer years ago, you can do the same thing with single stage urethane now. The new paint is just about as forgiving. (I shot mine out in the open and wet sanded/buffed.) Only snag is it will kill you if you sniff it.

This is a very good place to hang out:

http://autobodystore.com/forum/index.php

Carrameow 02-26-2006 06:42 PM

Thats not whut I meant
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by junqueyardjim
You didn't leave much to say - you done said it all! At least if you think you can get it done with the power of positive thinking, why bother us normal people.

We all got something we're scared of and we're running from..and working on cars is a release and its something that I can do and forget for part of the day that I am very human and someday I'm not coming out of the alley standing up....

junqueyardjim 02-26-2006 07:06 PM

Oh, don't be too serious
 
And don't take me too seriously either. But paint jobs are serious business if you want anything that looks halfway descent. I have a friend Bob, he is an MD and a good one, also teaches at IU Med School. Well, Bob had this little car, Toyota or Mazda or whatever and decided one Saturday to paint it dark green with a brush. Now if you got within two blocks of that car you couldn't help but look at it and say, "my goodness, whatever happened to that little car" it looked that bad. But it was OK with him, he said, "paint is paint" and I got it painted!

lietuviai 02-26-2006 08:11 PM

When I looked at your thread about using a roller or brush, I was going to suggest you taking it your local pre-school and let the little tykes give it good finger-paint job.;)

Tirebiter 02-26-2006 09:55 PM

Surface prep is EVERYTHING. If it has imperfections, they willshow when the job is done. Use Prepsol to do a final wipe down just before shooting your primer. Use blue tape to mask so it will come off easier.

Have a garage available? Use cheap plastic drop covers and staples (through a small piece of cardboard) attached to the ceiling and walls to make a tent. Wet the floor and sweep it to keep down dust.

Personally, I like to use catalytic (two part) paint. Immron is my favorite but Durathane is good too. It dries hard as rock and is VERY chip resistant. I use a cheapo spray gun ($35) just in case I screw up and it kicks off in my gun.

Don't paint in cold temps or in high humidity. Apply in thin even coats with an hour wait in between. DON'T forget to clean out your gun between coats.

The best way to go if you are unsure about your skill is to prep it yourself, to the primer, and let a pro apply the finish coats.

kmaysob 02-26-2006 10:26 PM

finger paint it

banshee350 02-26-2006 10:51 PM

I painted the 240 that I sold It was the light gold metalic and the clear was comming off .wet sanded the hole car sealed and shot it with a premixed color that matched .cost was $200 for materials.Link to pics below

http://pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/wvopowered/album?.dir=50a2&.src=ph&store=&prodid=&.done=http%3a//photos.yahoo.com/ph//my_photos

Dana B. 02-26-2006 11:19 PM

Unless the car was prepped perfectly, I'd stay away from maroon or other dark colors -- as they show EVERY imperfection.

rwthomas1 02-26-2006 11:22 PM

Paint is the one thing I don't do. It takes too much time and costs a lot in materials. If you screw it up its more time to fix it. The cheapest way to go is to remove EVERYTHING, do all the prep, drive it to Maaco, Earl Sheib, etc. and then wipe it down in the parking lot, etc. The chimps at the cheapo paint joints don't know much but they know how to shoot the paint. I have seen several "cheap" jobs like this come out really nice. RT


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