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  #1  
Old 04-14-2013, 09:10 PM
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CadetTY CadetTY is offline
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Default base coat clear coat painting

Im looking to do a base coat clear coat paint job on my next restoration. Im either going ppg or Martin SR. Paint i was just wondering if anyone has done this on a cub, if so post some pics. Also the numbers given in the paint chart, do you just tell the guy behind the counter the product number and they mix it or do they get it pre mixed? Also before painting i wil obviously prime my parts, is there a sealer i will need to spray before paint? Im looking to wet sand my primer and clear coat. I wana do .a really nice job show quality restoration. Any help is appreciated and tips!
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Old 04-15-2013, 04:38 AM
J-Mech J-Mech is offline
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How serious are you?... Are you sand blasting the parts? If starting with bare metal, you need to paint it with either an epoxy primer, or a self etching primer. These are both VERY EXPENSIVE. But, that is how to start. I have laid my base right on both types... and had pretty good luck, but you should really lay down a 2K primer/filler on top of the epoxy or self etch. A 2K is sandable and will take out any imperfections in the base primer. Then you can lay your base color on top of that, wet sand it and lay the clear on top. So... 1 good coat of epoxy.. 1-2 coats if your use the self etch. 2-3 coats for the 2K. Then wet sand. 2-3 coats of color. Wet sand again. Then 2-5 coats of clear. I would let the last coat of clear completely dry, wet sand and lay the last coat on. Doing all this work will give you a PERFECT show quality paint job. All you have to decide is how much time/ $$ you want to spend!! Oh, and most places that sell paint mix it on the spot. Sometimes you can just tell them you want a color (I.E. cub cadet yellow) and they have the code. Sometimes them/or you have to find the code. Some places have a color scanner so you could just go to cadet and buy one can of spray-bomb color, paint a piece of paper with it, and they can scan for color match. I have found though, that a scan does not always produce the same color. My suggestion would be that no matter how you get the color to them, that you first have them just mix a half-pint to 1 pint, go spray it and make sure it looks rights before you have them mix the full amount. This saves you the headache of a wrong color match, dollars wasted, and wasted paint. Good luck!!

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Old 04-15-2013, 07:45 AM
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I use spies pant products at work bt thats all i ever used. And its very expensive. The other brands like Martin SR. Paint and PPG are in my price range. Yes, I will be sandblasting most of my parts.
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Old 04-15-2013, 11:38 PM
J-Mech J-Mech is offline
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Ok. Well you sound like you are on the right track!! Where I am, I use NASON. It's DuPont's cheaper line. (Cheaper than straight DuPont, or Centarri (another DuPont line)). Nason is pretty affordable, but just epoxy and self etch primers in general are expensive. I personally prefer the epoxy. It is a VERY hard base. It is almost impossible to get it off once it sets. (Usually only with a grinder) So if you get a chip in the paint during transport, it only chips down to the primer. Good luck and, as always, HAVE FUN!!
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Old 04-16-2013, 07:40 AM
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Anyone else have any info
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Old 04-16-2013, 09:01 AM
Randy Littrell Randy Littrell is offline
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J-Mech is right on the money with everything he has said. I have also used the Nasson paint with good results. I did skip the epoxy and urethane primer on one and just used a rattle can primer over bare metal and painted right over the top with good results as well.



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Old 04-16-2013, 02:58 PM
baldy347 baldy347 is offline
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When i painted mine i screwed up and used rustoleum primer ,then Nason's over it. Nasons is much better than rusoleum imho ,but it didnt stick to to the primer. Later use of Nasons primer with Nasons cover coat worked fine.
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Old 04-17-2013, 07:21 AM
WVZR-1 WVZR-1 is offline
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Pick the vendor of choice and use their products "start to finish"!
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Old 04-23-2013, 01:27 AM
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IMO check out the body shops in your area, most have nothing to hide and will be more than happy to answer your questions, and give you somemore advice to. Tell them your plans, and who knows, you maybe able to do the prep work youself and they'll lay down the paint for you. Paint, reducer, hardner and fisheye remover cost money, and alot of it. And don't forget the thinner for cleaning out the gun. There are two shops around here, one works by casses of beer. They walnut blasted my frame, and dash tower primed for two cases of beer= $30, sand blasted four rims, primed= one case of beer, they love that kind of stuff to enjoy after work. Plus one guy Leroy get's into cubs.
and the other is the, "couple hundred, probably less"
Your call, just threw it out there. Good luck. Questions don't cost a dime, answers sometimes do
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Original's Face Lift thread.http://www.onlycubcadets.net/forum/s...ad.php?t=34439
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Old 04-23-2013, 01:34 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CadetTY View Post
I use spies pant products at work bt thats all i ever used. And its very expensive. The other brands like Martin SR. Paint and PPG are in my price range. Yes, I will be sandblasting most of my parts.
Pleas stay away from the diff and trans with the sand. A wise man on OCC once told me this, because sand will find it's way inside, and you won't be happy.
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Original's Face Lift thread.http://www.onlycubcadets.net/forum/s...ad.php?t=34439
(O) Start to Finish video.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAoUNNiLwKs
Wheel Around videohttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUL-m6Bramk
They can't all be turn key!
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