|
Post by kpnuts on Nov 17, 2015 12:23:47 GMT -7
|
|
Deleted
Registered: May 19, 2024 2:57:19 GMT -7
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Nov 18, 2015 9:13:23 GMT -7
That looks so good.
|
|
|
Post by kpnuts on Nov 27, 2015 13:13:07 GMT -7
|
|
|
Post by kpnuts on Dec 8, 2015 13:58:27 GMT -7
|
|
|
Post by CoyoteCrunch on Dec 9, 2015 6:58:54 GMT -7
That is crazy how this just keeps coming back.
Reminds me of our spoiler we did for our 1:1 Camaro. The primer would lay nicely, and as soon as I would hit it with paint, it would react. I would strip it, sand it, try again, and get a reaction in a different area. What we ended up doing, was striping it, hard sanding, then applied a thin gel coat on it before we primed and painted again. This seemed to do the trick. Since it was plastic, like our beloved models, all we could figure was somewhere, somehow, something REALLY bad was drawn into the plastic itself, absorbed if you will, and with a shell layer of paint, it reacted. Sine primer breathes better than paint, we are thinking that's why it never reacted to the primer coat.
But for sure, I think your daughter would still love the build sir, it is, after all, something from YOU to HER. And that in itself is what matter's the most.
|
|
Deleted
Registered: May 19, 2024 2:57:19 GMT -7
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 24, 2015 12:54:15 GMT -7
I had a similar problem stripping one of my bodies that had red auto primer on it...the paint came off pretty easily but the primer just wouldnt budge. I ended up just letting it soak for a month in superclean, then i scrubbed it in soapy water to get some paint dust/particles that were still lingering, cleaned it with clean water and then reprimered it with the same primer. I also had some pitting in a few areas, those i ended up having to sand almost down to the plastic to get rid of them, then i reprimed those sections.
|
|