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D2 - Body and Exterior Bumpers, bonnets, glass, trims - Everything outside |
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#11
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What does 'flash' mean in that context? Let it dry naturally?
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#12
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Only two coats of clear?
I know it's 2-pack and doesn't often require flatting and buffing, but 2 coats still seems a little on the thin side! I read 'flashing' to mean drying naturally. Should be obvious with most bases - glossy when wet, satin when dry.
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Cheers Marty ____________________ Current: 2001 Audi S8 - Brilliant Black with Black interior, C5 RS6 rims (whenever I actually put them on...), Solar Sunroof, Tinted side and rear glass, RNS-D, Grom, Bose, clunky old phone in arm rest! 2002 Audi S8 - Project Replacement head coming arrived thanks to MJ Silver with Black interior. All features as the '01, with the 'S' mode auto shifter. Dodgey rear tint (need to find a way to get rid of that). Family: 2009 Volvo XC90 V8 R Design - has a louder more obnoxious exhaust than the S8, sounds great! Love this thing - Q7 was double the price, and certainly not double the car! Sold: 1997 Audi A4 - Hamilton's Club Sport, Achat Grey (will miss the old girl) |
#13
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From memory, when I did a paint course years ago, I think it means to let it dry to a "touch-dry" rather than completely set.
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Cars... '93 Audi Coupe 2.0 Alpine White (sold) '99 Audi S4 Merlin Purple - K04 upgrade to 412hp (sold) '00 Audi S8 Agate Grey (Sold ) '11 Audi Q7 4.2tdi Unknown Red (Classic Red Pearl Effect - thanks MJ) |
#14
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I think flash means let the solvent evaporate, but not the polyurethane polymerise ie 'set'. If you touch masking, if it strings then you're ok
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#15
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Looking at that thread on which paint is best and the response from KDS Keltec who run a high end bodyshop in Kent, the best finish it achieved when you paint and clear coat, then flat, clearcoat again and then wet sand and buff to get a mirror finish. This is often called 'Flowcoating'
This gives an good paint depth without 'solvent pop' that you get when apply too many coats and the solvent can't escape' leading to a dull finish that takes years to stabilise Here is a demonstration https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ViT9z-zrJJU Then buffing https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ve_9IBW78uo |
#16
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#17
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Those are pretty useful Gave me motion sickness watching them though
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#18
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I contacted the chap in the video, "The Gunman" - he said 2k epoxy too and that that is also what they used on aeroplanes.
I have ordered some PPG UHS lacquer and reading the fact sheets, it requires 2 coats which gives a 60 micron thickness. I'll then flat and give another 2 coats to enable a 120 micron thickness of clear. I'll do a separate post, but I'll need to wait until the weather warms up to between 18 and 25 degrees. It seems that PPG is one of the top clearcoats so I'm quite looking forward to how this turns out! |
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