PAINT TOUCH UPS
This will be hard for me to explain properly without pictures or showing you. I will try to write this as clearly as I can, but if it does not make sense, or is unclear please say so and I will try explaining it differently. Complete resprays are easier than GOOD touch ups, but often complete resprays are not practical due to time or money restraints.
First thing to do is get your colour mixed and matched. To do this, i would suggest removing the number plate flap and taking that your paint store so they can match the colour.
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To make this easy, I will give a masking guide, relevant to mini’s.
- If you are touching up a spot in the middle of a bonnet, leave the complete bonnet exposed and mask the rest of the car, be sure to lift the bonnet and mask the front guide right into the engine bay to avoid overspray getting in there
-if you are touching up an area to on the bonnet close to the right hand edge, mask the entire car leaving the entire bonnet and right hand guard exposed (obviously if it’s the left hand side, do the same) ...(same masking applies for touch ups to top of guards)
- If you are touching up the bonnet close to the edge near the scuttle panel (panel between bonnet and windscreen) mask entire car leaving the bonnet and scuttle panel exposed (same masking applies for touch ups to scuttle panel
- If you are touching up the front guards, MASK THE DOWN FRONT side of the A pillar seam, and the rest of the car leaving only the guard exposed
- If you are touching up the A panels, MASK DOWN THE BACK SIDE of A pillar seam, and the rest of the car leaving only the door and A panel exposed (same masking for repairs to front door)
- If you are touching up centre of the door, mask the entire car leaving door exposed
- If you are touching up the rear edge of the door, mask entire car leaving only the door and rear side of car exposed MASK DOWN THE FRONT SIDE OF C PILLAR SEAM (same masking for repairs to front edge of front of the rear side panel)
- If you are touching up there rear side panels, mask entire car leaving only the rear side panel exposed MASK DOWN THE FRONT EDGE OF THE C PILLAR SEAM
- If you are touching up the rear panel, MASK DOWN THE REAR EDGE OF THE C PILLAR SEAMS, mask or better still remove the lights, boot badges, boot handle.
- If you are touching up the roof, mask entire car leaving only the roof exposed, don’t forget to mask the underside of the drain holes in the drip rail
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Ok, now doing an effective touch up, requires a lot of gun control. And, a lot of understanding of how different gun angles will affect the coverage/pattern
I would strongly suggest you practice on a sheet of news paper, or something other than your car.
Typically, when you are spraying, the gun should remain at 90 degrees to the panel on the horizontal plane, and 90 on the vertical plane. This is the correct angle for spraying.
When touching up a panel, you need to bleed the new colour into the old.
Lets go over to the testing paper. Aim at the paper, get your distance right (remember, thumb on the fluid tip, pinkie on the job) and spray for about 2 seconds. Have a look at the shape of the pattern and the different consistencies in coverage. If you fan is set right, you should have a long oval shape. Look at the centre of the pattern, the colour is the thickest here, and as you look towards the edge it gets lighter and fades out.
Now, keeping the same vertical plane, aim the gun at 30 degrees to the panel and spray for 2 seconds. You will see that the colour is the richest at the edge where you were holding the gun and at the other edge it slowly fades out... this is part of bleeding
Now, get two sheets of news paper and open them out, side by side just overlapping so that you effectively have a really long sheet of paper. In the middle of the long sheet of paper, get a texter put your hand on the sheet of paper and trace it. So now you have a palm sized circle in the middle of the paper.
Get your gun, aim it at 90 by 90 at the right edge of the circle (don’t spray, we are just going thru the motion at the moment), now turn your hand to the right till you get that 30 degree angle again. This is the angle that you would open the trigger at, then bring it back to 90 degrees with the trigger in, move it to the left hand side (still holding that 90 degrees) then turn your hand to 30 degrees when you reach the left hand edge of the circle and then release the trigger. And thats how you bleed. The area inside the circle is your repair and you are bleeding it into the other sides.
I would suggest you practice this till you are confident, maybe try some different angles and see what works for you.
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Ok, so the car is masked. Using 800 grit sand paper Key the entire area that is exposed, all the way out to the masking tape. (actually, it is better to sand before you mask).. the aim is not to take the paint of, but only to sand till it is no longer glossy.
1.If you are only doing a couple of repairs (or just one) I would recommend buying a spray can of ecth primer (if there is bare metal exposed) and a primer filler. With the etch primer (if needed) only give the repair area 2 light coats. You do not need to bleed the primer into the old pain, just cover the bare metal. Then (after 20min) apply the first coat of primer filler, cover the area, again you do not need to bleed, but overlap it onto the old paint by 70mm. Apply 4 coats with 5 min between coats. Allow at least 3 days to cure before going to step 2.. (you can move on the next day, but the longer you leave it the better.. but no more than 5 days)
2.Time to guide coat. Apply 1 extremely light dust coat to the primer. You are not trying to paint it black, only give it just enough to see a speckly covering
3.Using a sanding block and 600 grit sand paper rub ONLY THE GUIDE COAT off. Once it is gone, there will be no orange peel left and the repair SHOULD be flat
4.Guide coat now gone, time to paint. First prepsol the panel, then tack rag it. Remember your bleeding technique, start at 30 degrees open trigger, bring around to 90, move across the repair and swing out to 30 and release. Do 3 coats like this, by which time the colour should be obvious over the repair section. Don’t forget, 5 min between coats
5.Just to assist the bleeding, do 2 dust coats. Start 300mm off the edges of the repair in every direction and finish at 300mm off the repair
6.Have a look at how its coming along. It might be good, or it might need a little more either bleeding or colour (or both). I will not be able to tell you, but by this point I would hope you would have some understanding of gun manipulation and would be able to work it out on your own... (if not take some good photos and PM me and I’ll see what I can do)
7. Once you’re satisfied with the bleeding and colour, give the ENTIRE PANEL thats THE WHOLE EXPOSED PANEL NOT JUST THE REPAIR, 5 coats of clear with 5 min between coats.
8.After 3 hours you can carefully remove the masking
9.After a week you can start the compounding process (exactly the same as what it mentioned on this page of this thread in this procedure
http://www.ausmini.com/forums/viewtopic ... 0&start=75 .. step 17 onward)
Ok, now that is one of about 5 different repair techniques, but probably the easiest. Remember to practice and experiment with the bleeding until you are well and truly comfortable.
Can any of you guys, micowen, Trixi, Bad Arse Mini, miniDave, or any of the other spray painters on here seen anything I’ve missed? Please feel free to point anything out.