despite the knob at the shop telling me I needed 50kg of cellulose, I've looked a bit deeper at Jawel Paints and found they sell the same stuff
cheaper on eBay. They also have more stuff for sale on eBay than their own website. I still don't know what paint to use.
Cellulose
£35.70 per litre in the shop, £60.00 for 2.5l on ebay plus £18.00 or £14.00 for antibloom thinners. They won't mix in the metalic car colour
that I want
1k polyester "basecoat"
£49.48 per litre in the shop or £37.00 on eBay. £8.60 for a litre of thinners. A bit more expensive but better stuff? The shop guy said you HAVE to
clear coat within 15 min, you can't sand it then clear coat. Is this true? What primer do I use with this?
Water Based Paint
£24.00 for half a litre (18 on ebay) or £45.63 for a litre. Thin with distilled water up to 5%. Is there any real benefit to this stuff? What
primer do I use with it?
to me the choice is rather obvious tbh
you will require 1 ltr of colour coat for the scooter.
Where are you spraying btw is it covered and heated?
[Edited on 16/2/09 by Mr Whippy]
quote:
Originally posted by Mr Whippy
to me the choice is rather obvious tbh
you will require 1 ltr of colour coat for the scooter.
Where are you spraying btw is it covered and heated?
[Edited on 16/2/09 by Mr Whippy]
hi
if your not used to painting ,pick cellelose it is much more forgiving and can be flatted and or polished and recoated easier than anythink else.
avoid 2 k if you dont have the correct air mask etc.
you dont need it to warm but it wants to be dry in your paint shop!
graham
2k is the dogs danglers to use but it can kill you.either sooner or later unless you have the right gear. Also the overspray is very sticky and
carries a very very long distance
Water based are difficult for amateur to use and require perfect conditions --- warn clean air drying
1k paint is fine trouble it its to last really needs protected by 2K lacquer
Cellulose demands very good surface preperation can be slightly tricky to use but is easier to fix problems like runs and orange peel once the paint
is dry.
To spray cellulose you must have very dry conditions or you will get bloom which demands rubbling down and another coat of paint to fix.
Generally HVLP spraying uses half the paint or less depending on what you are spraying of conventional spraying. because it allows much thinner
coats and produces only about 1/4 as much over-spray and paint bounce off.
[Edited on 16/2/09 by britishtrident]
At these time Im painting my locost with poliuretane PPG, you need to clean perfectly the surface, and have too much cerefull with the dust, the
f##xx$%% dust !!!!!!!!! I heate the dust !!!!
Be patience, take a deep breath (with the mask).... count 1, 2 3.. do some yoga, to have patience, to avoid throw the paint gun tru the window !!!
[Edited on 16/2/09 by Maradona]
[Edited on 16/2/09 by Maradona]
quote:
Originally posted by Maradona
At these time Im painting my locost with poliuretane PPG, you need to clean perfectly the surface, and have too much cerefull with the dust, the f##xx$%% dust !!!!!!!!! I heate the dust !!!!
Be patience, take a deep breath (with the mask).... count 1, 2 3.. do some yoga, to have patience, to avoid throw the paint gun tru the window !!!
I have used Jawel paints, excellent service.
The 1K Acrylic took ages to harden - I wrapped a painted piece after several days and when I unwrapped it it had bubble wrap texture
Water based you need good temperatures and low RH for best results.
Cellulose can bloom in cold damp weather - but can polish up.
Dare I say 2K paint is my preferred method.
I used 5ltr of Cellulose to give my old Dutton a quick paintjob, came out pretty well for a first attempt, didnt have a drop of paint left over at the
end though...
Got it from the Ebay for about £80 (5 Ltrs Cellulkose, 5 Ltrs Primer, 5 Ltrs thinners and a free mask)
Not sure if this is the same shop you were already looking at?
Have a dig in the special offers section, you might find a similar deal on the colours you want..
Linky