KohrtRacing
Well-Known Member
As a long time racer I know full well that pretty paint and body doesn't cut lights or run the number so I've ignored it for many years, however, with the setup of racing where I want it to be for the time being and the offseason approaching, I thought I would get the jump before winter on finally getting the car pretty so I've begun body work and paint preparation.
For context of myself and the car's finished expectation I am a big DYIer however I have never painted a car before. I do not expect show car quality and it needs to be a paint job that honestly if I was to come back from a run and it's got a chip in it, I would have no stress. Fancy paint is a major anxiety increaser and I just don't think I'd even want that. AKA, The fenders will have tools on them
However, as you can tell from the pics of the car, it needs some color love and I'm simply getting it protection + making it one color (Along with making it as good looking as I possibly can) with the hopes that I can do it under $1000. My father shot his Dart in the driveway growing up and it honestly looked great for it's intention even in black so I've been picking his brain and know in my head it's very doable.
The car has hail damage I want to fix so my game plan, if accurate, is to get to bare metal, epoxy primer clear low spots, guide coat, sand to find low spots, filler, sand again, guide coat, sand for low spots again, and then if fixed, move towards complete car epoxy primer and then shooting with a single stage paint. Epoxy primer for this car, the paint supplier says will be $200. $400 for the paint. Another $100 for reducer/hardener/fill and $200 for HVLP guns, drapes, etc. I ask a lot of questions and everyone I ask says you can make a vanilla paint look great with good body work, not the other way around so body is my focus.
My question is a very broad one but I'm seeking any tips/tricks from anyone who understands the context that I'm under (of the cars expectation and attempt under budget) and can give any thoughts to consider in the future. The one thing I do have is a lot of time and motivation with no disgust to work at it. I do plan on shooting this inside my garage with drapes when ready with a high-volume gun.
Another question I have is more on the paint side. The decision is not made but paint color is down to T7 Bronze, AA-1 Silver or B5 Blue. The car is likely to get a black vinyl top regardless of color. Understanding that it's single stage and will not be put on professionally is there a color of these that you think I realistically should be avoiding? Example, I considered a deep cherry red but because of my process, lack of skill, I'm afraid I simply won't be able to do it justice enough and it's going to look real bad. Maybe I'm wrong in that assessment.
Would love thoughts, opinions, tips, tricks you can share as someone who has gone through this process as I'm sure there are many here!
For context of myself and the car's finished expectation I am a big DYIer however I have never painted a car before. I do not expect show car quality and it needs to be a paint job that honestly if I was to come back from a run and it's got a chip in it, I would have no stress. Fancy paint is a major anxiety increaser and I just don't think I'd even want that. AKA, The fenders will have tools on them
The car has hail damage I want to fix so my game plan, if accurate, is to get to bare metal, epoxy primer clear low spots, guide coat, sand to find low spots, filler, sand again, guide coat, sand for low spots again, and then if fixed, move towards complete car epoxy primer and then shooting with a single stage paint. Epoxy primer for this car, the paint supplier says will be $200. $400 for the paint. Another $100 for reducer/hardener/fill and $200 for HVLP guns, drapes, etc. I ask a lot of questions and everyone I ask says you can make a vanilla paint look great with good body work, not the other way around so body is my focus.
My question is a very broad one but I'm seeking any tips/tricks from anyone who understands the context that I'm under (of the cars expectation and attempt under budget) and can give any thoughts to consider in the future. The one thing I do have is a lot of time and motivation with no disgust to work at it. I do plan on shooting this inside my garage with drapes when ready with a high-volume gun.
Another question I have is more on the paint side. The decision is not made but paint color is down to T7 Bronze, AA-1 Silver or B5 Blue. The car is likely to get a black vinyl top regardless of color. Understanding that it's single stage and will not be put on professionally is there a color of these that you think I realistically should be avoiding? Example, I considered a deep cherry red but because of my process, lack of skill, I'm afraid I simply won't be able to do it justice enough and it's going to look real bad. Maybe I'm wrong in that assessment.
Would love thoughts, opinions, tips, tricks you can share as someone who has gone through this process as I'm sure there are many here!