BobbyG
New member
- Dec 29, 2009
- 13,211
- 0
I'm wondering if this is the result of a factory repair rather than a production line mishap.
When a "flaked" paint it applied it's important to lay down the paint as evenly as possible ensuring that the film thickness is minimal. By laying down a series of thin coats, the flake in the paint sets up quickly and evenly giving you a very uniform appearance in all light conditions.
It looks like the paint was applied in a vertical pattern. It also looks as it if it was applied too thick allowing the flake to sink making it appear darker in some spots and lighter in others. The way I used to solve for this was to lightly dust the panel again allowing the flake to become evenly suspended to ensure that uniformity I'm looking for..
From all the photos you've posted I'm wondering if the rntire car was painted by hand rather than a robot on an assembly line...
Most if not all factory finishes are applied by robots using a pressurized system and high speed rotating heads.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqMP6WX2o-g&feature=list_related&playnext=1&list=SPFDD1F1BEAFC77490]P-500iA/P-700iA Car Body Prime, Paint & Seal Robots - FANUC Robotics Industrial Automation - YouTube[/video]
When a "flaked" paint it applied it's important to lay down the paint as evenly as possible ensuring that the film thickness is minimal. By laying down a series of thin coats, the flake in the paint sets up quickly and evenly giving you a very uniform appearance in all light conditions.
It looks like the paint was applied in a vertical pattern. It also looks as it if it was applied too thick allowing the flake to sink making it appear darker in some spots and lighter in others. The way I used to solve for this was to lightly dust the panel again allowing the flake to become evenly suspended to ensure that uniformity I'm looking for..
From all the photos you've posted I'm wondering if the rntire car was painted by hand rather than a robot on an assembly line...
Most if not all factory finishes are applied by robots using a pressurized system and high speed rotating heads.
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqMP6WX2o-g&feature=list_related&playnext=1&list=SPFDD1F1BEAFC77490]P-500iA/P-700iA Car Body Prime, Paint & Seal Robots - FANUC Robotics Industrial Automation - YouTube[/video]