***Update***
I just talked to John Effrige who is the custom car builder and painter that painted this car.
He told me he used a paint line called
Mipa which is a German line of paints. He also tole me he used a "Medium Solids" clear for the top coat and sprayed 4 heavy coats.
Now this is the type of information you want anytime you're going to do any kind of work on a custom car. You normally can't get this kind of information because the guy that owns the car doesn't have it and normally doesn't also have the name of his painter on Speed Dial in his cell phone.
Not so with the owner Al...
Al sent John the link to this thread and then John sent me an e-mail offering to tell me anything I wanted to know about the build of this car and the paint job.
I just had about a half hour conversation with John and I'm confident he's going to read this thread so...
THANK YOU
Thank you John for taking the time to contact me and it was great talking to you on the phone. While I'm a big fan of polishing single stage paints, for situations like this classic 59 Elky, a basecoat/clearcoat finish is the way to go.
So we'll do what we call a Test Spot after we first wipe the car clean and clay it to remove any overspray, and after we dial-in a system to remove the swirls and scratches we'll do our best to give the paint that wet-look everyone loves...
The car will be here in 4 more hours.
As soon as it arrives I'll do my best to capture the true condition of the finish, it's cloudy outside so I'll likely have to use the Brinkmann Swirl Finder Light like you see Janna using here,
1954 Ford F-100 - Modeled by Janna
And then I'll start a "Pictures & Comments" thread for this special project.
Cool.
