Paint your car for $100
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Paint your car for $100
- From: Eric Sturgis <ericsturgis@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 30 Jan 2012 04:02:37 -0800
OK not my doing, no I've not done it. I've only seen the photos. But they used to paint car like this 100 years ago so why not. If anybody is brave enought o try it, I wanna see the photos. I do have a fender and hood off my van from when they were replaced.....I could try it....Hmmm?
Here’s how I painted my car for about $50.
It's actually very easy and the results are amazing!
First off, get a can of Tremclad “Real Orange” (or what ever color you want) in
the can form, not spray can.
Tremclad it is acrylic-enamel paint, which is very durable.
Next prep your car as if was any other paint job, fix all the rust, etc....no
need to prime the car since the Tremclad already contains elements which allow
it to be painted over bare metal.
Next, after prepping the car, get several small 4" professional FOAM
rollers, it is tiny and has one end rounded off, and the other cut straight,
and is a very high density foam. u also need a jug of mineral spirits to thin
the paint.
The thing I really like about this method is that there's no mess, no taping
the whole car; just key areas, and you can do it in your home garage.
Since you’re not spraying, there is virtually no dust in the air, hence, no
dirt in the paint. - Just make sure to clean your garage first -.
Also, it doesn’t really smell at all, dries overnight and it super tough paint!
If you ever decide to later re-paint the car professionally, just prep and
paint. There’s no need to strip the Tremclad.
I have done this to a few cars, and I can say it works amazingly well; you just
have to be patient.
Next, you thin the paint with Mineral Spirits , to the consistency of water,
just a bit thicker.
Then get out the roller and paint!
NOTE: Don’t get the paint shaken when you buy it. Enamel is supposed to be
stirred.
Otherwise you'll have bubbles in the paint for a week!
After you lay on two coats, wet sand the whole car, then repeat….
(Two coats/wet sand, two coats/wet sand).
Use progressively finer sand paper each time.
(I painted the whole Charger using only one can of Tremclad. Since you’re
rolling, not spraying the car, you use ALL of the paint and don’t lose half in
the air).
It’s not really that much work, because you can stop and start any time, you
can do just a door, or the hood, etc.
Do one panel at a time, and don't stop once you start. Once you’re done the
final coat, wet sand with about 1000 grit to a totally smooth finish.
Then I use a high-speed electric polisher with a buffing bonnet and Turtle Wax
polishing compound. I do the whole car with this, and I’m telling you,
depending on the amount of time and patience you have, the results are amazing.
Laugh if you want, but for $30 worth of paint, about $20 for rollers and sand
paper, it really looks good.
Also you can do these steps overnight, paint one evening and by morning you can
wet sand. I have personally done a lot of painting, mostly single stage acrylic
enamel, in my garage with really good professional results.
But it stinks; it's a real pain to do, easy to make a mistake, messy, and
expensive! The Tremclad is awesome paint, the "Real Orange" is
amazingly close to “Hemi Orange”, and almost looks like it has some pearl in
the Sun.
It is an awesome colored paint, right out of the can.
I used this technique on my 1974 VW Beetle as well. Here are the results:
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/Picture10.jpg
The car before:
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/IM000475.jpg
Another after pic:
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/DSC00164.jpg
Here is a car I sprayed (1971 Beetle, midnight blue metallic):
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/DSC00194.jpg
Here is the car before (1971 Beetle):
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/Picture1.jpg
Here are a few pics of the Charger done:
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/DSC02764.jpg
http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d13/69martin/DSC02769.jpg
Well, that's my two cents worth, sorry for the long post. I was bored lol
I painted the orange beetle in 1999, and it still looks like the day I painted
it, the 71 blue beetle I painted in 2000, and built the car for my dad, I used
the same paint on my Charger, maybe one day I’ll spring for a good paint job,
prepping is 90% of the work, stripping the car, sanding, etc..... painting is
overrated!!!
So if you have TIME, then I’d say go for it, the worst that could happen is
that it doesn’t turn out and your out $50, but if your patient, and experiment
with lets say just the trunk panel and if you like it do the whole car, if not
just get it done by someone else for $4000. I don't know about you guys, but I
would rather spend the $4000 on other parts like getting the mechanics sorted
out and new chrome, cause when u have really nice paint and crappy bumpers,
door handles it just sticks out more.
Yes I painted it with a "professional" high-density foam roller. The
trick is in how you thin the paint, get it as thin as possible without running,
and the paint "self levels" it comes out like glass, wet sanding just
makes it better, it all depends on how much time u have. I have sprayed a few
cars in my garage with single stage acrylic enamel and it's a pain, messy,
stinks, etc.
The Tremclad is almost odorless and is really easy to work with. You can paint
one day, wet sand the next, and immediately re-coat. Once you got all the coats
on, just wet sand and buff with a compound, then wax - and you’re “good to go”.
I’ve painted three cars this way and the 1974 VW Beetle I did six years ago
still looks awesome.
The paint is cheap like $30 a gallon; you can get it tinted to any color you’d
like. On the Charger, I used about 3/4 of a can.
Even when you spray with a HVLP gun, you still waste about 30% of the paint
that just goes in the air. Tremclad is still only “rust paint”, but it is a new
type, which is enamel.
I still strip the car of chrome, bumpers, handles; key locks, basically
everything, and then tape off where I might get paint on something I don't want
painted. The paint is tough, like stove paint when it's done. I’ve spilt gas on
it in really hot weather, and it resists stone chips extremely well. Two years
ago, I had to repaint a fender on the VW Beetle, so I purchased a small can of
paint to do it.
Years later, the color match was exact.
I’m up in Canada,
where it's called Tremclad, in the US it would be the Rustoleum. It's
a rust paint and it buffs really nice, but make sure it's the new stuff - an
enamel, or acrylic enamel.
It goes right over most anything and doesn’t react with any old paint or
filler, and doesn't require any primer. On a car I used to have, I had it
professionally painted four years after I painted it and they put a base/clear
on top of it with no issues. It’s really easy to do, just be patient, take your
time, test on something first and perfect the technique. As a hint if you try
it first you paint the surface, and then really lightly "skim" the
surface with the weight of the roller only to remove any lines bubbles etc,
then just leave it for a minute or two and you'll see it just "self
levels" totally flat to glass. Then, wet sand it really fine, use a spray
bottle and keep the paper really wet, finish with a 1000 grit or so and then buff
with a random orbit polisher using Turtle Wax POLISHING compound, NOT the
rubbing compound, its' to harsh. It is critical to use the proper roller; it's
about 4" wide and about 1.5" thick, and very high-density white foam.
It really works and is much tougher paint than today’s single stage or base
clear, very hard to scratch, but easy to buff. I get compliments on my paint
jobs, and they never believe how I do it.
Well I went to www.rustoleum.com
and they gave me a choice between the U.S. and Canada sites; so I went Canadian
and they list Tremclad, so it is a Rustoleum Canadian product.
Now who knows how this translates down in the U.S. of A.? But I'm sure with
some e-mails and/ or toll free number research w/ the Rustoleum Company, this
can be determined!
I did the web search and here's a website, I emailed for application
procedures, tools needed and availability, when I hear back I’ll post my
findings but see what you can come up with.
I believe the manufacturer is RPM international Inc.
Oh, and here's a link:
http://www.rustoleum.com/product.asp?frm_product_id=548&SBL=
--
Eric
Tacoma, WA
1962 Chrysler Newport 2 door HT
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