Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 8,582
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat


https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.

Also I thought the clear coat is the reason that paint jobs look better
now than 30 years ago or so, especially wrt white cars. In the past
white cars looked dull and dirty after a few years, but I've only washed
my white car once in 5 years, it's a 2000, and the finish looks fine. I
thought that's because of the clear coat, and if it's under the white
paint, I don't see how it could help the appearance at all.


Q:How do you touch up the paint on your car?
A:Quick Answer

To touch up the paint on your car, wash the vehicle, sand the blemished
areas, apply a layer of clear coat, and apply the paint following the
manufacturer's instructions. Then wax and buff the painted spots

Full Answer

Begin touching up the paint on your car by noting how many areas need a
touch-up job and buying the paint quantity needed. Choose the correct
paint shade using the shade chart of the car manufacturer. Normally,
touch-up car paints are available in pint or quart-size aerosol cans.
They are also available in bottles and as applicators to which a brush
is attached.

After washing the car with clean water, allow it to air dry completely.
Use a car paint sandpaper to sand the blemished areas.

Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint. When using the touch-up paint,
first test it on an inconspicuous spot on the car. Apply the clear coat
on the test spot before applying the paint. Judge how glossy the paint
is, and use the paint accordingly.

Follow the instructions given with the car paint since the method of the
touch-up job varies between paint brands. When painting, move the hand
back and forth to apply the paint evenly in straight lines. Overlap the
bands of paint by one-half of each band width.

Wax the spots soon after painting, and buff to give the area a shine. If
required, use a hair dryer over the painted spots to give them a glossy
look. Avoid painting the car on a humid day.
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,297
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat

On 1/3/2017 3:44 PM, micky wrote:

https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.

Also I thought the clear coat is the reason that paint jobs look better
now than 30 years ago or so, especially wrt white cars. In the past
white cars looked dull and dirty after a few years, but I've only washed
my white car once in 5 years, it's a 2000, and the finish looks fine. I
thought that's because of the clear coat, and if it's under the white
paint, I don't see how it could help the appearance at all.


Q:How do you touch up the paint on your car?
A:Quick Answer

To touch up the paint on your car, wash the vehicle, sand the blemished
areas, apply a layer of clear coat, and apply the paint following the
manufacturer's instructions. Then wax and buff the painted spots

Full Answer

Begin touching up the paint on your car by noting how many areas need a
touch-up job and buying the paint quantity needed. Choose the correct
paint shade using the shade chart of the car manufacturer. Normally,
touch-up car paints are available in pint or quart-size aerosol cans.
They are also available in bottles and as applicators to which a brush
is attached.

After washing the car with clean water, allow it to air dry completely.
Use a car paint sandpaper to sand the blemished areas.

Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint. When using the touch-up paint,
first test it on an inconspicuous spot on the car. Apply the clear coat
on the test spot before applying the paint. Judge how glossy the paint
is, and use the paint accordingly.

Follow the instructions given with the car paint since the method of the
touch-up job varies between paint brands. When painting, move the hand
back and forth to apply the paint evenly in straight lines. Overlap the
bands of paint by one-half of each band width.

Wax the spots soon after painting, and buff to give the area a shine. If
required, use a hair dryer over the painted spots to give them a glossy
look. Avoid painting the car on a humid day.


Clear coat is applied at the factory over the base color but base coat
is over rust proofing so maybe they mean to say provide a primer if
these finishes are sanded off.
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 11,640
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat

On 1/3/2017 3:44 PM, micky wrote:

https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.




See the full answer below. They are using the clear coat as you would a
primer. Yes, it is a gloss paint but the color coat will still adhere
to it if it is solvent based.

I did a touch up on my last car but just put the color and clear, no
base. Blended in and was invisible as it was a fairly dark blue.


Full Answer
Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint.

  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18,538
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat

On Tue, 03 Jan 2017 15:44:55 -0500, micky
wrote:


https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.

Also I thought the clear coat is the reason that paint jobs look better
now than 30 years ago or so, especially wrt white cars. In the past
white cars looked dull and dirty after a few years, but I've only washed
my white car once in 5 years, it's a 2000, and the finish looks fine. I
thought that's because of the clear coat, and if it's under the white
paint, I don't see how it could help the appearance at all.


Q:How do you touch up the paint on your car?
A:Quick Answer

To touch up the paint on your car, wash the vehicle, sand the blemished
areas, apply a layer of clear coat, and apply the paint following the
manufacturer's instructions. Then wax and buff the painted spots

Full Answer

Begin touching up the paint on your car by noting how many areas need a
touch-up job and buying the paint quantity needed. Choose the correct
paint shade using the shade chart of the car manufacturer. Normally,
touch-up car paints are available in pint or quart-size aerosol cans.
They are also available in bottles and as applicators to which a brush
is attached.

After washing the car with clean water, allow it to air dry completely.
Use a car paint sandpaper to sand the blemished areas.

Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint. When using the touch-up paint,
first test it on an inconspicuous spot on the car. Apply the clear coat
on the test spot before applying the paint. Judge how glossy the paint
is, and use the paint accordingly.

Follow the instructions given with the car paint since the method of the
touch-up job varies between paint brands. When painting, move the hand
back and forth to apply the paint evenly in straight lines. Overlap the
bands of paint by one-half of each band width.

Wax the spots soon after painting, and buff to give the area a shine. If
required, use a hair dryer over the painted spots to give them a glossy
look. Avoid painting the car on a humid day.

Makes perfect sense, since you are not using a base/clear touchup.
Sanding to "level" the defect takes the shine off, so you put on a
light coat of clear to re-seal the repair area and bring back the
shine - yiou then use the "single stage" colour coat to do the repair.
It shines by itself, without clearcoating..

Sometimes a lioght colour sanding with #600 paper (wet) and another
light coat of clear before re-buffing is used.

  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18,538
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat

On Tue, 3 Jan 2017 15:54:34 -0500, Frank "frank wrote:

On 1/3/2017 3:44 PM, micky wrote:

https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.

Also I thought the clear coat is the reason that paint jobs look better
now than 30 years ago or so, especially wrt white cars. In the past
white cars looked dull and dirty after a few years, but I've only washed
my white car once in 5 years, it's a 2000, and the finish looks fine. I
thought that's because of the clear coat, and if it's under the white
paint, I don't see how it could help the appearance at all.


Q:How do you touch up the paint on your car?
A:Quick Answer

To touch up the paint on your car, wash the vehicle, sand the blemished
areas, apply a layer of clear coat, and apply the paint following the
manufacturer's instructions. Then wax and buff the painted spots

Full Answer

Begin touching up the paint on your car by noting how many areas need a
touch-up job and buying the paint quantity needed. Choose the correct
paint shade using the shade chart of the car manufacturer. Normally,
touch-up car paints are available in pint or quart-size aerosol cans.
They are also available in bottles and as applicators to which a brush
is attached.

After washing the car with clean water, allow it to air dry completely.
Use a car paint sandpaper to sand the blemished areas.

Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint. When using the touch-up paint,
first test it on an inconspicuous spot on the car. Apply the clear coat
on the test spot before applying the paint. Judge how glossy the paint
is, and use the paint accordingly.

Follow the instructions given with the car paint since the method of the
touch-up job varies between paint brands. When painting, move the hand
back and forth to apply the paint evenly in straight lines. Overlap the
bands of paint by one-half of each band width.

Wax the spots soon after painting, and buff to give the area a shine. If
required, use a hair dryer over the painted spots to give them a glossy
look. Avoid painting the car on a humid day.


Clear coat is applied at the factory over the base color but base coat
is over rust proofing so maybe they mean to say provide a primer if
these finishes are sanded off.

Clearcoat isn't a primer. Se my earlier post re base/clear vs "single
stage"


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,415
Default OT car paint, clear coat, color coat

micky wrote:
https://www.reference.com/vehicles/t...milarQuestions

Says to put the clear coat on before the color coat. I thought it was
the other way around. I would have thought the clear coat is shiny and
color coat won't adhere to it well.

Also I thought the clear coat is the reason that paint jobs look better
now than 30 years ago or so, especially wrt white cars. In the past
white cars looked dull and dirty after a few years, but I've only washed
my white car once in 5 years, it's a 2000, and the finish looks fine. I
thought that's because of the clear coat, and if it's under the white
paint, I don't see how it could help the appearance at all.


Q:How do you touch up the paint on your car?
A:Quick Answer

To touch up the paint on your car, wash the vehicle, sand the blemished
areas, apply a layer of clear coat, and apply the paint following the
manufacturer's instructions. Then wax and buff the painted spots

Full Answer

Begin touching up the paint on your car by noting how many areas need a
touch-up job and buying the paint quantity needed. Choose the correct
paint shade using the shade chart of the car manufacturer. Normally,
touch-up car paints are available in pint or quart-size aerosol cans.
They are also available in bottles and as applicators to which a brush
is attached.

After washing the car with clean water, allow it to air dry completely.
Use a car paint sandpaper to sand the blemished areas.

Apply a clear coat to the blemishes, particularly those that are large
in size, to act as a base for the paint. When using the touch-up paint,
first test it on an inconspicuous spot on the car. Apply the clear coat
on the test spot before applying the paint. Judge how glossy the paint
is, and use the paint accordingly.

Follow the instructions given with the car paint since the method of the
touch-up job varies between paint brands. When painting, move the hand
back and forth to apply the paint evenly in straight lines. Overlap the
bands of paint by one-half of each band width.

Wax the spots soon after painting, and buff to give the area a shine. If
required, use a hair dryer over the painted spots to give them a glossy
look. Avoid painting the car on a humid day.


Clear coat on first, I can only assume it to seal old paint and retain
basic color undercoat for final coat.

Normal I apply color coat over proper color primer, then while it's still
tacky, apply clear coat. Using regular paint in cans, requires hardeners
which at first make the paint thinner and flow nicely, but will dry and
harden much more quickly. This paint, if you don't use hardener, can takes
weeks or months before you can buff. Spray cans are often lacquer and need
buffing after a week.

Greg
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Paint questions: bare metal prep, clear-coat for lacquer? [email protected] Metalworking 0 September 26th 13 05:45 PM
What kind of clear coat for acrylic paint default[_5_] Home Repair 7 September 24th 12 05:17 AM
Clear coat on steel [email protected] Metalworking 26 April 8th 12 04:11 PM
Clear Coat [email protected] Home Repair 4 December 26th 06 09:51 PM
A thick clear coat D-Rick_Bush Woodworking 6 July 21st 06 03:36 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:27 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"