Priming and Block Sanding
Having looked at various paint removal methods in the last issue,
by now we've stripped the old finish to bare metal?or we have an
original finish where the paint is adhering with no failure problems
such as cracking, chalking, or pinholes. In both cases, the process of
preparing the surface for paint is similar. Your goal, through a process
of gradual refinement, is to create a surface as perfectly smooth and
as free from flaws as possible.
Surface Cleanliness
You
will use a medium primer surfacer to fill and build up the flawed
surface, then you'll block-sand it to level out this primed surface.
First, let's discuss a very important requirement before priming: a
clean surface. If the surface is bare metal, then a metal conditioner
such as metal prep for steel and aluma prep will clean it, physically
and chemically.
Promoting adhesion through cleanliness
and following the paint manufacturer's instructions during each step of
the process is extremely important. If that beautiful paint job you've
spent so much effort to create doesn't stick to the metal underneath,
you'll have to strip it off and start over.
A
painted surface must first be thoroughly cleaned with a wax and grease
remover. Modern waxes contain silicone, which must be removed before new
paint can be applied. Nothing sticks to silicone. Another way to clean
existing paint that also etches it is to scrub the old paint with Scotch
Brite and powdered Comet-type cleanser. Be careful to avoid scratching
glass and chrome if you use this method. After the finish is thoroughly
clean, the next step is to repair the chips and scratches. Remember, the
new finish will only mirror the surface to which it is applied. Ninety
percent of paint work is preparation. The actual spraying of the color
coats is a minor part.
Broken
areas such as chips and scratches should be feather-edged, i.e., the
chips must be sanded smooth and gradually tapered back to the
surrounding level so that you feel no edge. This can be done easily
using a sanding machine such as a DA or Jitterbug. Start with an 80-grit
disc to work the rough edges down, then finizzzsh with 220. Existing
paint should also be sanded with a 220-grit dry or 360-grit wet to
remove any evidence of gloss. Thoroughly clean the surface, paying
particular attention to nooks and crannies where paint dust or sludge
may accumulate.
Finally, wash the entire surface with
wax and grease remover. After the surface has been cleaned and prepared
for painting, be careful not to touch it with hands or gloves or in any
other manner. Check the surface for smoothness by rubbing your hands
over it before the final cleaning. Even after washing, your hands always
have a certain amount of oil on them, which is sufficient to destroy
the durability, adherence, and appearance of your new finish.
Masking
Before
spraying any primer or paint, cover and protect adjacent areas from
overspray. Areas to be protected should be covered with masking paper
held to the body by masking tape. Good quality masking paper and tape
will permit no paint to penetrate or seep through to the panel, chrome,
or glass it is protecting. Tape must adhere easily to painted surfaces,
chrome, glass, or stainless steel. Equally important, no adhesive must
remain on the surface after the tape is removed.
Years ago I had the misfortune of using
some inexpensive tape. To make things worse, the tape stayed on the car
for several weeks. I ended up removing it with lacquer thinner, steel
wool, and a safety razor blade. The inferior tape adhesive stuck to the
chrome, rubber, and glass and literally had to be scraped off. As I
recall, this took me several days. Believe me, a roll of 3M tape is cheaper than several days of labor.
Primers
Even new sheetmetal panels have grinder
gouges and stamping flaws that make the surface less than perfect. The
typical paint job, only a few thousands of an inch thick, will only
accentuate flaws. Primers and primer surfacers are designed to fill
these imperfections.
Primers are relatively thin
undercoatings whose primary function is to promote adhesion between bare
metal and subsequent coatings. Their secondary function is to prevent
rust. Aluminum and zinc-coated panels require special primers for proper
adhesion. Although primers provide excellent adhesion and rust
protection, they are relatively thin-bodied and have poor filling or
building characteristics.
Primer
surfacers are formulated to provide good filling properties with
relatively few coats. Several types exist. Catalyzed primer surfacers,
such as Glasso MS primer filler, dry very quickly with minimal
shrinkage. A primered panel can be sanded in as little as one hour after
priming. Lacquer-type primer surfacers such as DuPont 131S can require
much longer to dry completely, and shrinkage can be a problem.
Drying time is extremely important. I've
found it best to give primer surfacers plenty of drying time. All
surfaces have some shrinkage as they continue to harden or dry. Sanded
too soon, they continue shrinking, causing small flaws or distortions in
the final painted surface. Whenever I do a show-type paint job, I let
the primer surfacer dry for up to several weeks before sanding,
depending on weather conditions.
Block-Sanding
After the surfacer is dry, it is
blocksanded, then more surfacer is applied. Depending upon the degree of
perfection desired, this process can be repeated three to six times.
Block-sanding
is a process where sandpaper is used with a hard rubber sanding block. I
make my own blocks out of such things as balsa wood and rubber hose to
conform to the surface being sanded?flat, gradual curve, compound curve,
etc. Sandpaper backed by a sanding block gradually wears down the high
areas. A guide coat of contrasting color primer or paint is sprayed over
the primer surfacer before sanding begins. As sanding continues, the
guide coat is sanded off the high spots and left in low areas, providing
a guide to sanding and identifying areas requiring additional filling.
More surfacer is sprayed over these low areas, and the blocking process
is repeated.
Spot putty has about the same
consistency as the familiar glazer's putty but has an entirely different
composition. It is usually made of the same basic material as the
primer surfacer but is heavier in solids. Gouges or scratches left after
the blocking process can be filled with spot putty.
The typical priming and block sanding process would involve:
- several "blockings" with 100-grit, aluminum oxide, open-coat, dry sandpaper and a long-board sandingblock
- blocking with 150-grit dry followed by a blocking with 220 wet and a hard rubber block
- final priming and block-sanding would be done with 400 wet and a soft rubber block
Use blocks for all sanding. Bare hands
don't provide enough support to level the primer surface evenly and can
even create ripples in the final finish. Generally, use the longest
block possible; too-short blocks don't show up the low spots.
Determining
whether or not a panel is truly smooth is easy after the final paint is
on, when reflections show up every minor undulation, but you can detect
them while blocksanding. First, the contrasting guide coat will remain
in low spots, so you know where you have to sand or fill. Second, your
hands can feel unevenness; put your dry palm on the metal, and move it
sideways as well as back and forth. Thin fabric work gloves may help.
When you're almost finished block-sanding / clean off the sanding dust
and dampen the panel with a damp (not wet) rag. Sight down the panel
under the right lighting, and you'll see reflections in the damp sheen.
Pre-Kleano and other slow-drying solvents can also show reflections
similarly.
This work brings us to the point where we are ready to begin painting. In the next article
we'll look at the various types of paint and go over the painting
process, from application of sealers to spraying the color and finally,
color sanding and final finishing.
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