1994 Toyota Camry. Repainted white (same color) in December.
painted on a cool day.
1-Day did the job. Their medium grade Sinclair Polyurethane. They advised letting the coat cure for 90 days. I've restored cars, and had them painted. This painter earned a B+ in my opinion.
Good flow out. Few areas with minor orange peel. Mostly, the finish looks like molded plastic. The car is always kept covered. Southern California beach town. Blasting heat late in the day , fog in mornings.
This morning I clayed the car. Then rubbed out the paint with Cobra pads and Griot's #4 polish. Festool DA buffer. In some areas, the #4 wasn't making a difference, so I backed down to a #3 for the areas with light orange peel. Done under shade. I'm not happy.
Even on the hood, the paint doesn't have that depth that I want. The visual impression is a little 'south' of a new Detroit car. When I sprayed antique cars with lacquer, the paint "talked" to me. It signaled for wet sanding, or courser/finer rubbing compound.
What is my next step? (I took some digital photos but they don't clearly an unacceptable finish --- maybe early evening light would be good). I plan to seal the finish with that German product (black and red bottle).
Unhappy in Santa Monica (and worn out, too)
painted on a cool day.
1-Day did the job. Their medium grade Sinclair Polyurethane. They advised letting the coat cure for 90 days. I've restored cars, and had them painted. This painter earned a B+ in my opinion.
Good flow out. Few areas with minor orange peel. Mostly, the finish looks like molded plastic. The car is always kept covered. Southern California beach town. Blasting heat late in the day , fog in mornings.
This morning I clayed the car. Then rubbed out the paint with Cobra pads and Griot's #4 polish. Festool DA buffer. In some areas, the #4 wasn't making a difference, so I backed down to a #3 for the areas with light orange peel. Done under shade. I'm not happy.
Even on the hood, the paint doesn't have that depth that I want. The visual impression is a little 'south' of a new Detroit car. When I sprayed antique cars with lacquer, the paint "talked" to me. It signaled for wet sanding, or courser/finer rubbing compound.
What is my next step? (I took some digital photos but they don't clearly an unacceptable finish --- maybe early evening light would be good). I plan to seal the finish with that German product (black and red bottle).
Unhappy in Santa Monica (and worn out, too)