Wet sand, compound or other?
#1
Wet sand, compound or other?
I need to renovate the exterior of the truck. It's in three parts:
1. Roof
2. Inner hood (scoop)
3. Outer Hood, Sides and Back
The roof needs rust and patch work and sunroof and alpine renovation. I am going to do the same process as I did on the interior with the finish being a brush painted black or aluminum colored paint. I'm leaning back towards black. Despite the heat issues.
The inner hood or scoop I'm going to do in black "blackout" vinyl. It's too visible for me to try and paint it myself in any method.
The outer hood, sides and back I want to compound or wet sand. Any one have an opinion on this?
If I do either, do I need to add clearcoat or something? Do I do a black touch up on a scratch or two?
Any one have any step by step links? Any comments appreciated.
1. Roof
2. Inner hood (scoop)
3. Outer Hood, Sides and Back
The roof needs rust and patch work and sunroof and alpine renovation. I am going to do the same process as I did on the interior with the finish being a brush painted black or aluminum colored paint. I'm leaning back towards black. Despite the heat issues.
The inner hood or scoop I'm going to do in black "blackout" vinyl. It's too visible for me to try and paint it myself in any method.
The outer hood, sides and back I want to compound or wet sand. Any one have an opinion on this?
If I do either, do I need to add clearcoat or something? Do I do a black touch up on a scratch or two?
Any one have any step by step links? Any comments appreciated.
#3
Your roof, if you compounded it, could rapidly go thru to the primer, which on mine is a sort of green color (I got the T shirt). Some of that 3M or the Meguier compounds and an electric buffer (90 degree) will work wonders. In your sun area, I think you might enjoy a white roof, or if we have turned you redneck by remote control, sand (tan) camo one color.
Just like your other projects, work slow and don't try to take off too much at one time. I used 1000 grit wet sand to get rid of some of the fuzzy white old clear coat.
Just like your other projects, work slow and don't try to take off too much at one time. I used 1000 grit wet sand to get rid of some of the fuzzy white old clear coat.
#4
I use Presta products when I cut and buff the cars I paint, they work great on restoring old finishes to. The whole kit with pads, chemicals and shaft adapter cost me $115 at CarQuest. It sounds like a lot but you wont get much from a single stage compound procedure, especially on a black vehicle. You really need a high speed buffer to get the best results but you can get by with a random orbit if you are patient and like to sweat. If it were mine I'd wash the whole car, lightly wetsand the problem areas with 1000 grit paper, follow it up with 1500 grit and then start the buffing process. Usually starts with cutting creme, then a "1500" polish, then a swirl remover followed by a hand glaze. Lots of work but I've made vehicles with far worse finishes than yours look spectacular.
If you want a quick result with minimal effort try the Turtle Wax Black Box kit. It's like $20 and though it hides more than it actually fixes, the end result is quite good. We used it on our black Disco and it surprised the crap out of me. I thought it was a joke but I was feeling lazy and gave it a shot before going through the resto process. Takes a lot of elbow grease and you'll go through a whole pile of cloths but it's cheaper and easier than an overall cut and buff. Ours looked like total garbage with scratches, scuffs and oxidation everywhere. It looked more gray or brown than black when we bought it. Here's what it looks like after the black box. Wish I had a before pic but I didnt think about it before cleaning the Disco.
If you want a quick result with minimal effort try the Turtle Wax Black Box kit. It's like $20 and though it hides more than it actually fixes, the end result is quite good. We used it on our black Disco and it surprised the crap out of me. I thought it was a joke but I was feeling lazy and gave it a shot before going through the resto process. Takes a lot of elbow grease and you'll go through a whole pile of cloths but it's cheaper and easier than an overall cut and buff. Ours looked like total garbage with scratches, scuffs and oxidation everywhere. It looked more gray or brown than black when we bought it. Here's what it looks like after the black box. Wish I had a before pic but I didnt think about it before cleaning the Disco.
Last edited by s10lowrider1994; 01-11-2012 at 12:53 AM.
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