heat gun to increase curing time

budinthemud

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Okay well its getting cold (finally) down here in h-town and being mobile makes it a little tougher to detail. Now as far as applying lsp in the cold, it would take longer to cure. I was thinking of purchasing a heat gun to speed up the curing process. Would this help? If so, any advice using one. And what is recommended heat temperature to use on paint? Thanks
 
I have an infra tech, for curing coatings, but I bet you could find something in one of the big box stores
 
IMHO:
For mobile detailers to use heat guns/heat lamps
to try and warm up the great outdoors---so LSPs
cure faster...

Is about as useless as throwing a "Welcome Home"
party for Amelia Earhart.


Bob
 
My plan was to put some heat on the paint just like the sun would one panel at a time.
 
Using a heat gun can be risky especially on plastic bumpers. Using a heat lamp outdoors will not be very effective.
 
IMHO:
For mobile detailers to use heat guns/heat lamps
to try and warm up the great outdoors---so LSPs
cure faster...

Is about as useless as throwing a "Welcome Home"
party for Amelia Earhart.


Bob
I agree. Proper curing has to do with just the temperatures after you apply it.

CarPro Reload shouldn't be applied to paint below 50 degrees because it neither bonds well nor does it come out looking right. If the panel is cold then that'll affect it too.

So I guess it's worth asking:

What sealants are you using? If something has a 12 hour cure time, then forget it.




If I were you, I'd use a spray sealant like Meguiar's D156 that has proven to me to be the only LSP that I can apply in any weather.
 
IMHO:
For mobile detailers to use heat guns/heat lamps
to try and warm up the great outdoors---so LSPs
cure faster...

Is about as useless as throwing a "Welcome Home"
party for Amelia Earhart.


Bob

:dblthumb2::dblthumb2::dblthumb2:

Let nature take it's course.
 
This is the reason we are such a proponent of detailing in a repeatable controllable environment. Using a heat gun to heat up panels is going to be like using a cigarette lighter to cook thanksgiving turkey.
 
This is the reason we are such a proponent of detailing in a repeatable controllable environment. Using a heat gun to heat up panels is going to be like using a cigarette lighter to cook thanksgiving turkey.

:laughing: :cheers: :laughing:
 
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