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$50 Paint Job

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Ryan, Jun 8, 2007.

  1. tylerb
    Joined: Oct 25, 2006
    Posts: 75

    tylerb
    Member

    i saw a similar article in hot rod this month
     
  2. diamond dave
    Joined: Jul 18, 2006
    Posts: 458

    diamond dave
    Member

    well, as a painter, I have to say it's a way better idea than putting on an expensive paint job, then wet sanding through it for the whole rat rod theme. but I can paint a car with single layer acrylic urethane for 90.00 a gallon and thin it for 20.00 a gallon and harden it for 44.00 a gallon. so, even if I have to buy everything, which I normally have reducer and hardener left over from previous jobs, I've only got 150.00 and my time, which is very scarce.
    alot of pro shops are using single layer on all types of repairs. It blends well, you don't have the extra clearing step to do, but you can put clear over it if you want. and you can't beat the colors. pretty much every color except heavy metallics, but you can add flake to them. just don't run em' or you'll almost have to repaint to avoid sanding marks.
    on the other hand, I have had really great results with tractor supply company's line of tractor enamels. 20 bucks a gallon, about 6 bucks for high flash naptha to thin it and 8 bucks for hardener. I swear by the "low gloss black" and the "new holland red". my two personal favorites. they spray well and are very forgiving. I painted my old 52 chevy outside my ex wife's house and had the drunken neighbor guy come put his hand on the fender about 5 minutes after i finished. he freaked, but i just wiped it down with a little thinner and resprayed that part. you couldn't even tell.
    good luck. d.d.t.
     
  3. dbu8554
    Joined: Aug 7, 2005
    Posts: 60

    dbu8554
    Member
    from Vegas

    I think another reason is I have noticed alot of do it yourselfers do have a compressor and I have a compressor and all the painting equipment but the main pain in the ass is a place to paint I dont own a garage big enough to manuaver around my car and its got no windows so its really dusty with the 50$ paint job you can just paint it and if shit gets in the paint it sands out and if not its only 50$
     
  4. fiat128
    Joined: Jun 26, 2006
    Posts: 1,426

    fiat128
    Member
    from El Paso TX

    This seems like a great idea for keeping the city from harrasing you about parts and project cars that are kept around the house . $50 to make the junker look nice from 20 feet is a lot cheaper than car covers or paying off site storage. I think it's pretty cool myself.
     
  5. theHIGHLANDER
    Joined: Jun 3, 2005
    Posts: 10,404

    theHIGHLANDER
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    There's very little if any UV protection in rust-preventative coatings. They're also meant to be re-coated on occasion as needed with the same mat'l base. Most automotive grade mat'ls will fisheye when applied over rust paints. Even cheap refinish auto kits have left out the full measure of UV protection. It's one of the more costly additives. Given the application and the need to save on a less than desirable car, well, OK. But for all the time and effort put into even the beater style rides a good finish is always a good investment and gives your ride it's due. Suppose you need to get rid of it some day...what's it worth? Or do ya just not tell what's been done?

    While kool on the surface (no pun intended), the faults are many. My rides have always deserved more than a tractor paint job.
     
  6. leadsled01
    Joined: Nov 19, 2004
    Posts: 1,123

    leadsled01
    Member

    I am going to paint rustoleum on my parts car / driver , just to keep the sheetmetal from rusting anymore than it has. I'm not going to thin it much , just enough to let the brush and roller marks to flow out alittle bit. So when you see my 65 electra at the cinematic "don't think of me as hack"
     
  7. I am tempted to try it on the 49'...since the bodywork is going to be an ongoing thing and it would be nice if it was one color that could be recoated as the bodywork is done.
     
  8. mustangsix
    Joined: Mar 7, 2005
    Posts: 1,446

    mustangsix
    Member

    I predict that a year from now there will be a "Removing Rustoleum" tech post......:)
     
  9. Shaggy
    Joined: Mar 6, 2003
    Posts: 5,207

    Shaggy
    Member
    from Sultan, WA

    I was reading a thing on an old hot rod and it said the painter brushed on enamel? heated on a woodstove nice looking car in the photos
     
  10. I had a guy spray one of mine with True-Value Rust-X oil base a while back and it looks okay.. had it had the right prep, it would look decent, but this was just a let's slow the rust down deal, since it had no paint left at all. Which is the other thing, it just sits there, it's not driven. But still it looks pretty good for the paint job that it is. I don't see where the rust has broken through it anywhere, at any rate.


    So fast forward to this week, I got sick of the rust spots on my beater Suburban, so I spent the last couple days grinding them off, priming it with Rustoleum rusty metal primer. Then some high build auto primer (and some cheap ass grey spray primer over the yellow paint between the rust spots), and rollered out what was left of the Rust-X on it. I figure I'll see how well it holds up there... I think I broke about every rule there is for painting a car. And somewhere there is a damn cottonwood tree around here, because a breeze picked up while I was doing it and I have some of that shit rolled into the paint. But it does look a little bit better than it did. 1/3 or so of a gallon gave me enough to coat both sides and the back up to the windows.. and it had sat so long it had a skin on the top of it. Was that or flat white.. I figured the white would look like hell again that much faster, even though it was a full new gallon and I probably could have put 4 coats of it on.


    Rust-X is apparently tintable, I've seen tintable base in the oil base cans, and the tint cards have some lime greens and different purples and things. I'm thinking I'll see if they'll mix me a quart tinted to match my yellow and do the upper parts of it with that. Now the truck looks like I should have a Dale Earnhardt Wranger car on a trailer behind it..


    I'm just going to add that now that it's pretty well dry, I took a look at it, and it's not all that bad except for the cottonwood tree crap in it. I have to think that if I layed on 2 or 3 coats and it had been a little thinner, it would even out enough as it dried you could sand it out with some fine paper and clear it or polish it and it would look as good as everyday driver bodyshop work - maybe better, given the last couple partial paint jobs I've seen done on the familys cars (one had this weird sunken spot in the clear the size of a half dollar on the hood.. looks like one of the spots on mine where I ground the rust off it).
     
  11. ZZ-IRON
    Joined: Feb 28, 2007
    Posts: 1,964

    ZZ-IRON
    Member
    from Minnesota

    Interesting topic Ryan. We painted my buddy's Rambler once, with a roller. More for a joke. After we finished, if I was paid by the hour. I'd be rich. Lots of work. You still have to tape it and brush work in the tight areas. Looked OK, not great.

    Billy Johnson from Texas, painted his 50 Ford coupe White. He used a different method. He used a Power Puff, like the gals use. I said a powder puff? It looked Great. Enamel paint that flowed well. He was ahead of his time. You can buy those flat paint pads at the hardware store. I can see how it would work.

    I saw a cartoon in a magazine a long time ago, about painting. A sign on the Body shop "Cars painted $10.00" Two guys were walking around the corner of the body shop. Asking this question? How does Ace, paint cars so Cheap? Showing Ace in the shop. A car in front of him, he has a large bucket of paint & a large floor fan. He is in motion, throwing the paint in front of fan. One of the best, I never forgot it.

    Painting. If it works. It works
     
  12. styluss
    Joined: Nov 17, 2007
    Posts: 2

    styluss
    Member

    I just finished doing this myself in my driveway. But I ued a whole different method. I used a foam brush instead of a roller, and I did not sand and polish the final coat. Nor did I sand between coats. The use of the brush helps to eliminate the need to sand almost at all. The final result is awesome, see:
    [​IMG]

    If you wanna see what I did, I have a complete write up here:
    http://www.stylusscustoms.com/poormanspaintjob.html
     
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  14. 66cadillac
    Joined: Jul 1, 2007
    Posts: 42

    66cadillac
    Member
    from So. Cal

  15. Lobucrod
    Joined: Mar 22, 2006
    Posts: 4,122

    Lobucrod
    Alliance Vendor
    from Texas

    This looks like FNG one poster spam to me. NOBODY can paint a car with a brush and not expect to sand it unless you want the textured look. Might as well put some spackle on it.
     
  16. styluss
    Joined: Nov 17, 2007
    Posts: 2

    styluss
    Member

    Not spam gentlemen. I assure you that I painted the car in the photo with a foam brush and some Rustoleum thinned with Mineral Spirits... and I only sanded the car 2wice throughout the process, once prior to paint, and again after the thirs coat of 6 total.
     
  17. Clark Kustoms
    Joined: Oct 24, 2006
    Posts: 62

    Clark Kustoms
    Member
    from las vegas

    I did this car with a airless & Enamel exterior house paint.
     

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  18. leon renaud
    Joined: Nov 12, 2005
    Posts: 1,937

    leon renaud
    Member
    from N.E. Ct.

    for anyone that doesn't know about it yet Duplicolor now has a paint line called Body Shop Series gallon cans of paint ready to spray colors are limited but each gallon goes for 80$ and they have primers and basecoat/clearcoat as well as single stage all for 80$ each check out their web site
     
  19. Von Scott
    Joined: Sep 24, 2004
    Posts: 337

    Von Scott
    Member
    from fresno,ca

    What's this stuff called rust I keep hearing about?
     
  20. Von Scott
    Joined: Sep 24, 2004
    Posts: 337

    Von Scott
    Member
    from fresno,ca

    My O/T 79 olds wagon is sitting at work in the shop, waiting for the attack of the sponge rollers! If the rain stops this week and the termites don't swarm that much, I snap some pics in progress. On second thought come on termites I need the money!
     
  21. Frank
    Joined: Jul 30, 2004
    Posts: 2,325

    Frank
    Member

    I know this is an old thread, but some time is passed and would like to hear from any on here that might have tried it and how it held up? I have heard that the paint is very very slow to dry?
     
  22. Mopar Jack
    Joined: Jan 24, 2010
    Posts: 1,363

    Mopar Jack
    Member

    Poor people have poor ways....
     
  23. Ed ke6bnl
    Joined: Apr 15, 2001
    Posts: 181

    Ed ke6bnl
    Member

    For fun I did a camper shell for my truck, first time came out terrible, then I went to a 50/50 mix of paint and laquer thinner and a cupful of Japan dryer and it dried fast and looked presentable and sprayed nicely. been on for about 3 years so far. still good but this is not an automobile.
     
  24. wombat barf
    Joined: May 1, 2011
    Posts: 366

    wombat barf
    Member
    from oklahoma

    my local Atwoods sells gallon buckets of John Deere green and International white and reds for like $60 each. a co-worker used the green to coat a circa 1983 Dodge 1/2 ton with silver vehicle syndrome. it covered good and came out with that semi-flat finish that the mouse rodders are so fond of. never thought about trying to sand on it.
     
  25. Rehpotsirhcj
    Joined: May 7, 2006
    Posts: 1,514

    Rehpotsirhcj
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    1. Northwest HAMBers

    I tried this on my truck because it had a terrible paint job and I had no money. I now have an even worse paint job over a really terrible paint job..and I worked way to hard to get it that way. I'm not saying it cant be done...but you're a better man than me if you can make it look nice.
     
  26. 64Cyclone
    Joined: Aug 30, 2009
    Posts: 1,496

    64Cyclone
    Member

    I would paint a $50 farm truck like that.....nothing else.
     
  27. tooljunkie
    Joined: Oct 18, 2010
    Posts: 209

    tooljunkie
    Member
    from manitoba

    last winter i repaired a fiberglass front panel on a john deere gator(amt) and painted with hardware store green enamel.using a foam roller,it looked horrible.sanded it and re rolled it with a nap roller i washed in solvent,blew dry,and ran it over sticky side of duct tape to pull all the fuzzies out.4 coats and a light scuffing between.
    i didnt buff it,and it turned out suprizinly nice.a whole summer of park maintenance and only a couple light scuffs.
    if i could get my hands on sunburst orange,i would roll my O/T Power Wagon.
     
  28. Mine is holding up great, it is garaged but non the less still looking good 4 years later.
     
  29. derbydad276
    Joined: May 29, 2011
    Posts: 1,336

    derbydad276
    Member

    hres mine done 4 weeks ago well see how it holds up to a michigan winter
    this thing is a driver

    3 qts rusteolum at 8.99
    1 gal acetone 17.99
    thined 15% per instructions on can
     

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  30. wombat barf
    Joined: May 1, 2011
    Posts: 366

    wombat barf
    Member
    from oklahoma

    dude, that is just bad ass! house of kolor be damned ~ that is sweet!
     

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