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Tremclad Paint Job
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rkubik
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Clone
I am curious, why are you brushing and rolling it instead of spraying it? It is only a bike and not very big, like a car.
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Mark M
Originally posted by Clone View PostI am curious, why are you brushing and rolling it instead of spraying it? It is only a bike and not very big, like a car.
Advantages of rolling:
1) No spray equipment required.
2) No paint booth required (this is a huge deal for me, my garage is very full).
3) Minimal odor/fumes given off.
4) I can roll paint in my basement in winter when my garage is way too cold.
Mark
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Billy Ricks
Originally posted by Mark M View PostJmanz6,
I love the old 240Z's, they are my all-time favorite sports car. Great choice!
Mark
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Billy Ricks
Originally posted by Mark M View PostRead the Mopar thread on rolling Tremclad and look at the results.
Advantages of rolling:
1) No spray equipment required.
2) No paint booth required (this is a huge deal for me, my garage is very full).
3) Minimal odor/fumes given off.
4) I can roll paint in my basement in winter when my garage is way too cold.
Mark
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RobC
Not tremclad but I used rustoleum to paint my 4x4 trail rig about 2 years ago. The basics to get a good hard coat is to properly thin the paint and put on multiple thin coats on it. I cant find a good picture of the truck clean and shiny as that rarely ever happens, it IS a trail truck after all.
The paint has held up to tree branch rubs, mudbanks, and even a deer collision. The metal didnt hold up that well but the paint did fine
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Yeh, I know hand rubbing will work but isn't there a reason to use an electric polisher? Doesn't the heat of the buffing pad "burnish" the final coat making it more gas and chip resistant? I think I remember something about this in the past.
Nastyjones80 gs1100 16-v ported & polished, 1 mm oversize intake valves, 1150 carbs w/Dynojet stage 3, plus Bandit/gsxr upgrades
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Mark M
Just bumping this, I am finally getting some time to start tinkering with it. I said 6 weeks in my first post and that was Sep. 4, so I was only a couple of weeks out...
This week I will be cleaning up the side covers and shooting a light coat or two of semi-gloss black Tremclad spray bomb paint on the inner surfaces to provide a nice non-descript background to show off the new paint outside and avoid multiple colors being seen. I have also decided to pull my front fender and clean it up for paint at the same time. There is so little surface area to cover that I want enough to do each coat to justify getting a roller wet.
Results and pics to come as things happen. I did say this would be a slow process... Good thing it's a long winter.
Mark
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