dnoraker
New member
- Apr 19, 2010
- 262
- 0
I just got an '03 Suburban in "Indigo Blue". Beautiful truck! I'm looking to bring it near show-truck-grade using some damp/wet sanding. I have all the 1500 and 3000 discs for 3" and 6" DA and all grades of wet papers from 2000-3000.
My last vehicle was an '05 Pacifica in Magnesium Pearl (green-ish) and I damp sanded almost the whole thing because the orange peel was almost unbearable. The doors, though they weren't repainted, had even worse peel than the rest of the car. I ended up using the 3" DA with 1500 on those to level the paint, then it took 2-3 laps (sometimes more around near (taped) edges) with M105 and the double-sided wool pad to clear the sanding marks. These panels sanded nearly flat and have awesome reflections; I sanded until there was very little glossy paint left in the "craters". On other panels, I tried 2000 wet papers and wasn't trying to get it completely flat and the reflections are a lot better than factory, but not as clear as the 1500 grit areas. All in all, that car looks amazing and I get a lot of compliments from people who know what Chrysler paint looks like. Here's the catch- I didn't work with a depth gauge and so I'm not sure if I took too much clear off. Because the paint is a pearl metallic, it's not a real glossy paint in the first place, so I thought the car looked a little murky anyway. But, it made me wonder if I had taken enough clear off where it didn't have as much depth of gloss.
Now on to the truck. Yesterday, I did this with the hood:
- damp sanded with the 6" DA and 3000 grit discs (4-5 overlapping passes, medium arm speed)
- M105/rotary/Megs double-sided wool, which got most of the sanding marks out
- same, but with purple Kompressor pad, which knocked out the rest of the sanding marks
- M205/rotary/orange kompressor
- 85RD/rotary/blue to give it the finishing touch
This process seemed to reduce a little bit of peel, and get rid of most of the texture in the paint that looks like a paint spray mist (like micro-orange peel). DOI has increased (though wasn't bad before), and I can clearly read road signs in my hoad while driving!
Now, the rest of the truck seems to have more peel to it and I'm undecided on what to do. I want this truck to look smoking hot, as it's the first vehicle where I don't see myself selling for a long time (we are about to have 3 kids and might want 4-5 total). The body is nearly perfect, even with 110k, and worth putting the time in.
Do I:
- continue my process, which my have little effect on a couple panels that seem to have worse peel
- maybe try running the 3000 grit longer for more peel reduction, though this hasn't seemed to help a lot on on my Pacifica
- add another step before with 2000 or 2500 by hand since I can't find DA discs for the in-between grits
- go for the gold and start with 1500 and sand it nearly flat for the best DOI
Another Question:
- those of you with damp sanding experience, do you follow 1500 with 3000, or just go straight to compounding? I've tried it both ways on my Pacifica and I'm not sure if I saw a difference. MAYBE slightly better reflections where I followed with 3000, but I might be seeing things.
- do the 3" discs wear out after a panel like a door? I think I've used even 2 3" 1500 discs on a door. I don't think I'm moving too slow (I can't move too fast without losing accuracy), and I think I'm using enough water, but I can't tell for sure.
- If I sanded the paint on my Pacifica to where I saw only isolated "glossy" areas in the craters, then 2-3 laps with M105 and an aggressive wool pad, would you suspect that removed too much paint?
My last vehicle was an '05 Pacifica in Magnesium Pearl (green-ish) and I damp sanded almost the whole thing because the orange peel was almost unbearable. The doors, though they weren't repainted, had even worse peel than the rest of the car. I ended up using the 3" DA with 1500 on those to level the paint, then it took 2-3 laps (sometimes more around near (taped) edges) with M105 and the double-sided wool pad to clear the sanding marks. These panels sanded nearly flat and have awesome reflections; I sanded until there was very little glossy paint left in the "craters". On other panels, I tried 2000 wet papers and wasn't trying to get it completely flat and the reflections are a lot better than factory, but not as clear as the 1500 grit areas. All in all, that car looks amazing and I get a lot of compliments from people who know what Chrysler paint looks like. Here's the catch- I didn't work with a depth gauge and so I'm not sure if I took too much clear off. Because the paint is a pearl metallic, it's not a real glossy paint in the first place, so I thought the car looked a little murky anyway. But, it made me wonder if I had taken enough clear off where it didn't have as much depth of gloss.
Now on to the truck. Yesterday, I did this with the hood:
- damp sanded with the 6" DA and 3000 grit discs (4-5 overlapping passes, medium arm speed)
- M105/rotary/Megs double-sided wool, which got most of the sanding marks out
- same, but with purple Kompressor pad, which knocked out the rest of the sanding marks
- M205/rotary/orange kompressor
- 85RD/rotary/blue to give it the finishing touch
This process seemed to reduce a little bit of peel, and get rid of most of the texture in the paint that looks like a paint spray mist (like micro-orange peel). DOI has increased (though wasn't bad before), and I can clearly read road signs in my hoad while driving!
Now, the rest of the truck seems to have more peel to it and I'm undecided on what to do. I want this truck to look smoking hot, as it's the first vehicle where I don't see myself selling for a long time (we are about to have 3 kids and might want 4-5 total). The body is nearly perfect, even with 110k, and worth putting the time in.
Do I:
- continue my process, which my have little effect on a couple panels that seem to have worse peel
- maybe try running the 3000 grit longer for more peel reduction, though this hasn't seemed to help a lot on on my Pacifica
- add another step before with 2000 or 2500 by hand since I can't find DA discs for the in-between grits
- go for the gold and start with 1500 and sand it nearly flat for the best DOI
Another Question:
- those of you with damp sanding experience, do you follow 1500 with 3000, or just go straight to compounding? I've tried it both ways on my Pacifica and I'm not sure if I saw a difference. MAYBE slightly better reflections where I followed with 3000, but I might be seeing things.
- do the 3" discs wear out after a panel like a door? I think I've used even 2 3" 1500 discs on a door. I don't think I'm moving too slow (I can't move too fast without losing accuracy), and I think I'm using enough water, but I can't tell for sure.
- If I sanded the paint on my Pacifica to where I saw only isolated "glossy" areas in the craters, then 2-3 laps with M105 and an aggressive wool pad, would you suspect that removed too much paint?