Forums › Knowledge Base › Construction Help › Need a painter!
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SCOTT EVANS.
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June 26, 2007 at 10:31 pm #39894
new2hpr
ParticipantCan anyone recommend a good painter to help me with the rocket I just did my L1 with? I’ve spent enough on it that I don’t want a hack rattle-can job (like I’d do myself). Besides, it’s just too big to do a decent job with cans anyway (4″ x 5′)
I’ve seen some VERY high quality paint jobs within the club, so I know there’s talent available out there. How do you go about asking an autobody shop to do a rocket? How much should I expect to pay?
I’d like to get something along the lines of a white pearl a la Cadillac Escalade or Lexus, with a decent protective clear over it. Beyond that, I don’t want to get too crazy or gaudy. Maybe a gunmetal nose and fins? Ideas and suggestions are welcome, but I mostly just need a contact!
The rocket is currently at the “mostly wet-sanded off Kilz” stage and ready for a real primer. Any defects at this point would be some tiny spots of glazing putty if not filled by the primer alone.
Help a guy out!
Thanks,
KenJune 26, 2007 at 11:10 pm #44804Ed Dawson
Ken,
I’ve heard of guys trading big motors or a couple of hundred bucks for a professonal paint booth job. There are some incredible paint jobs being done out there by some very talented people.
Art….. feel free to chime in here any time……
One of the big expenses is the paint. Automotive paint is a three part mixture so you need paint, activator, and reducer. If you’re talking clear coat then you need two to three more as they can use different activators.
I am a bit of a hack when it comes to automotive paint. I do it in the barn and try my best. I really like the durable finish of the automotive paint despite all the hassles and safety precautions.
If you don’t get any replies and are still looking, let me know. I’d be glad to help if you buy the paint.
Speaking of buying the paint, I go to Bart’s Automotive paint in Longmont. They may have some local recommendations. I have wanted to head up to Conway’s shop but its a bit out of the way for me.
Ed
June 27, 2007 at 7:08 am #44805Art Hoag
ParticipantWell, I have my hands pretty full right now but I would be happy to look into doing it for you. It sounds like you want the same kind of paint job that I just shot onto Bruce’s rocket. I don’t really have any more white pearl coat left but I have a whole lot of regular white and red. I also have many different flavors of both metallic and candy blacks, blues, reds. I am also very set as far as primer and clear coat goes.
How big is the rocket (length diameter, fin size and number of fins)? I will be shooting tomorrow so I will rummage through all my base coats and see exactly what I have. If you wanted to work something out using my basecoats, I could provide materials, which would be much cheaper for you and less confusing. All you would have to do is choose a color or two and how it is applied, then, I do the rest.
Art
June 27, 2007 at 7:43 am #44806Art Hoag
ParticipantOh, yah. Stay away from that glazing putty or spot putty crap! I try to not use anything that doesn’t use an activator mainly because some products that don’t use an activator to initiate a chemical reaction will shrink over time or trap moisture under the paint, which in time will allow the paint to chip off or lift.
I recommend a product called “Metal Glaze” or “Blaze Glaze”. It is basically just a thinner form of Bondo that can be easily mixed and spread onto a surface. It is really good for filling shallow imperfections, pinholes in glass or carbon. It is also used to fill low spots in order to straighten a surface. If you are filling deeper and more involved imperfections then straight up Bondo will do the job. Most Napa stores and auto body supply shops carry the glaze.
Art
June 27, 2007 at 2:11 pm #44807Anonymous
Funny how things change. Years ago, I would not have even CONSIDERED flying an unpainted rocket. No way. I used to wonder about the folks who did such a thing.
As I got older and lazier, I started to fly to occasional primer-only rocket. Then I got into performance, and I started to prime things and wet-sand them on the launch site for optimal performance. I’d re-prime and re-sand before the next flight.
Now I have digressed even more. I only prime where I puttied, and then I sand it at home. If I scrape it up on the way out there, no worries. I fly glass rockets 95% of the time, and I like seeing the innards of a project as it sits on the pad. I actually gave away all my paint one day… But I do go through the Kilz!
June 27, 2007 at 4:30 pm #44808Art Hoag
ParticipantJohn, I think you aught to put a light coat of clear on some of your rockets and buff and polish it out. Wouldn’t look very pretty but it could be slick.
Art
June 27, 2007 at 4:31 pm #44809new2hpr
ParticipantThanks all for the inputs.
Ed, I know the barn-painting experience. My dad and I painted my first car in one. Like you said, I’m after the durability (and deep gloss) of auto paint.
Art, I knew I had seen some white pearl recently! It was Bruce’s L3 that put the idea in my head. The rocket is 4″ dia. and about 5′ long (LOC Fantom 438 EXL) with 3 clipped delta fins not too huge. Plastic nose, paper tubes, and G10 fins. I have a few areas where the Kilz bubbled and left pinholes, so that’s about all I have left to fill… maybe a tiny bit of touchup on the fillets. Keep me posted on your supplies. I don’t think it’d take much paint. I seriously overkilled on my “once-show, now street” car (’69 VW) with a full gallon of Porsche Guards Red and a full gallon of clear. It was painted back in ’89 or so, and people still ask if I just painted it. Garages are a wonderful thing!
I’m open to color suggestions, but I remember how easy it was to find mine on the prairie in its nekkid white state. Maybe a candy blue nose section with white elsewhere with some chrome trim?
What have you guys done for lettering, etc.? I like the look of chrome over anything. How well does chrome trim monokote stick? Would you put that on last or before clear-coating?
OK, enough babbling on. Art, if you can fit me in, that’s great. I just want to get it done before it gets damaged sitting around my basement!
The initial name idea for this small (for its complexity) 7-motor dual-deploy airstart bird is…….
EXCESS IN MODERATION
thoughts? 8) or 😕
-Ken
June 28, 2007 at 3:15 am #44810Conway Stevens
ParticipantFor lettering let me know as I have a guy that does lettering and graphics custom. He is reasonable and does them in MAY colors and styles and sizes. In fac t he even does Chrome.. As far as product you may need please feel free to give me a shout. I can direct you or recommend you to something or even some place to get what you want. In the past Ive been the painter as Art has but at the moment to much on my plate as well as the booth I was using is no longer available.
June 28, 2007 at 6:06 am #44803Art Hoag
ParticipantKen, give me a call anytime tomorrow. Since today was crappy I will be shooting primer on two L3 birds. I would like to give you a better idea of what I have for colors and what would be involved. Talk to you soon.
Art
970-576-1406June 28, 2007 at 6:47 am #44811Conway Stevens
ParticipantOR…………If you need a color I can get you a great price on some quality paint if Art doesnt have what you need or want. Again if you would like”true Chrome” look there is only 2 ways to get it. One buy the ULTRA high dollar 3 stage paint system called Mirra Chrome by Alsa Corp or the very high quality made (and locally made) graphic.
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