The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network







Register or Log In To remove these advertisements.

Go Back   The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network > 47 - Current classic GM Trucks > The 1960 - 1966 Chevrolet & GMC Pickups Message Board

Web 67-72chevytrucks.com


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 10-25-2010, 06:45 PM   #51
markeb01
Senior Enthusiast
 
markeb01's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Spokane Valley, WA
Posts: 8,356
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan in Pasadena View Post
Thanks Mark for taking the time to respond and posting the pix too. The rims I bought are TT-D's and are all 15x7's. The owner had stored them a long time and they have some kind of preservative oil on them. I think I'm going to pressure wash them with a strong degreaser to get the oil off the spokes. I'm actually not sure they will fit on the hub of my Jag suspension on my '46. If they don't, I'll save them for a future '60-'66 project.

Thanks for the paint mfg and name for your spokes. I'm a bit confused thought - you mention in your last paragraph you painted hte spokes black. Did you mean you painted BEHIND the spokes black?

I take it the "John Deere Blitz Black" you mention is an over the counter paint for general metals like Rustoleum? Obviously no one in Southern California is painting tractors so the other doesn't exist here as far as I know!

P.S. I'm definitely NOT a painter, so which temperature range or "speed" did you use with your Blitz Black and if you remember the mix ratio (I assume you recorded it for later touch ups?) I'd really appreciate the info.
Just be sure whatever degreaser you use is not harmful to aluminum, or it may discolor or stain the polished rim face.

Actually I painted the “front” of the spokes – twice. When they were brand new I painted them Iron Cast Gray because the bare aluminum spokes looked cheap. A few months ago I repainted the spokes gloss black, using the same brand of paint for compatibility. I first saw this done on a black 40 Ford coupe back in the 60's and thought it looked fantastic. Here’s what my wheels look like now:



Blitz Black is a brand name for an air dry enamel similar to Rustoleum, but it is specially formulated by Valspar for the John Deere tractor company. It is used on John Deere tractors for painting frames and small parts that aren’t normally seen. Presumably it was commonly used by tractor owners and restorers before it became a very popular hot rod paint. Unfortunately like so many other chemicals it is not longer available to anyone in California.

I’m no expert painter either. As a hobby or for friends I painted maybe 20+ cars between the 60’s & the 80’s. When I painted my truck black lacquer 10 years ago, I hadn’t touched a spray gun in nearly 15 years. I just tuned up by reading a variety of painting forums and gave it a try.

Sadly I didn’t write down the formula, but the last half gallon of paint left over was part of the final mix, so it will come out exactly the same for touch ups – assuming I paint during identical weather conditions and use the same spray techniques. Regular enamel is pretty forgiving paint, so it’s not all that hard to figure out. It just takes some experimentation and a few test shots to check the results.

What I can offer is I originally started out using acetone for thinner (per the paint manufacturer recommendations) and it came out “very” flat and tended to tiger stripe. It looked like chalky primer and I didn’t like it at all. Next I tried high speed thinner (for cold temperatures – figuring this would be somewhat slower than acetone) and it was still too flat for what I wanted. I then tried slow speed thinner (for hot temperatures) assuming this would really slow it down. It slowed it down so much it came out almost a full gloss. And I don’t mean like beautiful black lacquer, it looked more like a shiny paint job that was poorly done with really crappy paint. I finally ended up using about a 50/50 blend of medium and slow thinner, but I don’t remember the ratio of how much thinner to paint I used.

Once the finish turned out the way I wanted - I waited for a calm, dry, warm morning during the summer and shot the whole thing in one session. Of course this mix would need to be adjusted if applied during cold or damp conditions. It sounds more complicated that it was. I just kept mixing small batches and painting some scrap items until it came out the way I wanted. A couple of nice features of a cheap enamel paint job is that it is compatible over anything, so there is no worry of attacking or lifting the old finish, and if you mess it up, you can afford to do it over and improve your skills without breaking the bank.

By the way I really like your 46. I’ve always been partial to the design and especially the art deco grille. Torque Thrust D’s would look great on there.
markeb01 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-25-2010, 08:00 PM   #52
Dan in Pasadena
Senior Member

 
Dan in Pasadena's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Glendora, CA
Posts: 6,344
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Thanks for the comments Mark.

Not to hijack this thread but my '46 IS painted in black primer...well, kinda.
Pardon the crappy cell phone pictures but here is a Photoshop shot of my truck with the Torque Thrusts I bought. The white boxes in the bed of the truck are the boxes the rims came in. I managed to get all four for $150 from Craigslist!! Which I think is a helluva deal. The follow on shot is the original shot with the steelies. The steelies are off a '52 Chevy with the same year hubcaps. The truck is currently (badly) painted in rattle can flat black but until I can finish the truck otherwise I think a Rustoleum flat black would look ,much more presentable.
Attached Images
  
Dan in Pasadena is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-25-2010, 09:01 PM   #53
LostMy65
But Found Her 25yrs Later!
 
LostMy65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oregon City, Oregon
Posts: 10,530
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Labs are the greatest dogs.
__________________
I lost my 65 - Found it 25 years later:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=426650

66 C20 Service Truck:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=428035
LostMy65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-25-2010, 11:47 PM   #54
kalirodding
CLASSIX Truck Club
 
kalirodding's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Lodi Ca
Posts: 318
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Out of curiosity, what photoshop program do you use markeb01?
kalirodding is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-25-2010, 11:59 PM   #55
irish1966
Registered User
 
irish1966's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: hillsboro, oregon
Posts: 484
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan in Pasadena View Post
Thanks for the comments Mark.

Not to hijack this thread but my '46 IS painted in black primer...well, kinda.
Pardon the crappy cell phone pictures but here is a Photoshop shot of my truck with the Torque Thrusts I bought. The white boxes in the bed of the truck are the boxes the rims came in. I managed to get all four for $150 from Craigslist!! Which I think is a helluva deal. The follow on shot is the original shot with the steelies. The steelies are off a '52 Chevy with the same year hubcaps. The truck is currently (badly) painted in rattle can flat black but until I can finish the truck otherwise I think a Rustoleum flat black would look ,much more presentable.
The dog has that look "He's not takin pics of the truck again, is he?" LOL
__________________
Cheers
David

66 LWB Fleet (on hold)
64 LWB Fleet (daily driver)
65 SWB Fleet (almost finished as a driver)
64 SWB Fleet (just started - "Tommys Hot Rods" tribute truck)
Nothing worth doing, is easy.
irish1966 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 12:10 AM   #56
Dan in Pasadena
Senior Member

 
Dan in Pasadena's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Glendora, CA
Posts: 6,344
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

That's Sooner, the wonder dog. No, I'm not from Oklahoma..but he is! My sister in law used to live in Oklahoma and called and said her neighbor's champion female in heat had been "gotten to" by another pure bred but non-papered Lab down the street and the neighbor was upset and was giving the puppies away. I told her to pick the biggest, most blockheaded looking one and Sooner was soon on his way. He's been a truly great dog.

P.S. The '46 is his. Just ask him!
Dan in Pasadena is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 12:39 AM   #57
irish1966
Registered User
 
irish1966's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: hillsboro, oregon
Posts: 484
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

I agree. They are a great shop dog. They have the best temprement.
Attached Images
 
__________________
Cheers
David

66 LWB Fleet (on hold)
64 LWB Fleet (daily driver)
65 SWB Fleet (almost finished as a driver)
64 SWB Fleet (just started - "Tommys Hot Rods" tribute truck)
Nothing worth doing, is easy.
irish1966 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 12:58 AM   #58
ol_skool_chevy
Registered User
 
ol_skool_chevy's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Hillsboro, Oregon 97123
Posts: 1,300
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by sidthirteen View Post
Primer?? Well, here it is... I used rattle cans just so it's all one color...for now. Eventually it's gonna be a Slate Blue with an off-white cap. But if you're lookin' to go with paint with a flat finish, there are quite a few places that sell a kit for about $150-$200. Good luck!!!
Here's your SLATE BLUE. with a white cap...
Attached Images
 
__________________
Measure with a yard stick
Mark with Chalk
Cut with a torch



Built it yourself, don't count on others to to do it for you or with you. It will never get done
ol_skool_chevy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 02:01 AM   #59
tapeworm
fan of "Butters" Stotch
 
tapeworm's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: St. Paul, MN
Posts: 267
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Name:  0619001940.jpg
Views: 5969
Size:  73.2 KB

Not mine, but one I snapped a pic of at BTT50s this year

Sorry for the crappy phone pic, but I def like this one!
__________________
64 shortbox fleetside
replacing rusty junk with more junk, and one day to become a real truck again
tapeworm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 02:15 AM   #60
markeb01
Senior Enthusiast
 
markeb01's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Spokane Valley, WA
Posts: 8,356
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by kalirodding View Post
Out of curiosity, what photoshop program do you use markeb01?
I think maybe you wanted to direct this question to Dan in Pasadena. My photo modifying skills are very basic and limited to working with Paint program.
markeb01 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 10:25 PM   #61
fryer1979
Redneck Hillbilly
 
fryer1979's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Backwoods
Posts: 1,307
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

I know it is not a truck, but it is a Chevy and it is a satin paint job. About 18 cans of Rustoleum Satin Black spray paint, and 5 1/2 cans of Rustoleum Satin White. All in a total of about two weekends worth of work, not counting the sanding to bare metal I did before applying the similar rattle can job that I did before this one. I'm pretty proud of my handy work for my zero body experience, and it was fairly cheep (less than $100 total). My only complaint is that it scratches fairly easy.

Name:  my79.jpg
Views: 6471
Size:  44.0 KB
fryer1979 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 10:42 PM   #62
markeb01
Senior Enthusiast
 
markeb01's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Spokane Valley, WA
Posts: 8,356
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

It certainly looks cool. Nice layout and execution. And I like how personalized it is at a very affordable price. An inexpensive paint job can be very liberating. If I had a $5,000 paint job it would probably never leave the garage for fear of getting a chip or scratch.
markeb01 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 10:48 PM   #63
LostMy65
But Found Her 25yrs Later!
 
LostMy65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oregon City, Oregon
Posts: 10,530
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

I'm currently on a search for some vehicles painted with 'Zero Rust 28-95 Tan'
http://zero-rust.com/zero-rust-colors.html
__________________
I lost my 65 - Found it 25 years later:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=426650

66 C20 Service Truck:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=428035
LostMy65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-26-2010, 10:54 PM   #64
LostMy65
But Found Her 25yrs Later!
 
LostMy65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oregon City, Oregon
Posts: 10,530
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

This jeep is supposidly Zero-Rust Tan:
but it looks more yellow than the sample chip.

http://forum.ih8mud.com/40-55-series...zero-rust.html
__________________
I lost my 65 - Found it 25 years later:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=426650

66 C20 Service Truck:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=428035
LostMy65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-27-2010, 12:58 PM   #65
Dan in Pasadena
Senior Member

 
Dan in Pasadena's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Glendora, CA
Posts: 6,344
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by irish1966 View Post
I agree. They are a great shop dog. They have the best temprement.
He's (she's?) a beauty! What's his/her name?

My dog looks like he has "eyeliner" around his eyes and everyone comments on his looks. I bet yours gets the same comments?

After the movie, "Marely and Me" came out, every little kid would say, "It's MARLEY!" annd run up to him and want to hug him. He never flinched but it still worried me, afterall he IS a 100lb dog with big teeth...even though all he's ever truly killed is a ham sandwich!

Back to your regularly scheduled program - sorry for the tangent guys.

Re: rattle can job. My '46 was done by the previous owner with a Krylon brand flat (found a can under the seat). I used Rustoleum satin black I think on a couple of scratches and it was a bit shineir - though still NOT gloss. Now I need to redo the whole thing because it looks "spotty" but have been thinking I should use the little cheapo spray gun my compressor came with (I've never sprayed anything with a spray gun) following markebo1's advice above.

Maybe I'm overthinking it - What do you guys think? Even if it is (long term) temporary, I want it to look uniform and protect the metal as best I can. I suppose I could go to Harbor Freight and buy one of their cheap, but at least automotive-intended spray guns and their before-gun inline water separator. Opinions?

Last edited by Dan in Pasadena; 10-27-2010 at 01:06 PM.
Dan in Pasadena is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-27-2010, 01:13 PM   #66
irish1966
Registered User
 
irish1966's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: hillsboro, oregon
Posts: 484
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan in Pasadena View Post
He's (she's?) a beauty! What's his/her name? Sooner looks like he has "eyeliner" around his eyes and everyone comments on his looks when they see him. I bet yours gets the same comments. After the movie, "Marely and Me" came out, every little kid would say, "It's MARLEY!" annd run up to him and want to hug him. He never flinched but it still worried me, afterall he IS a 100lb dog with big teeth...even though all he's ever truly killed is a ham sandwich!

Back to your regularly scheduled program - sorry for the tangent guys.
LOL. Her name is Luna. I grew up with my dad's passion for breeding labs. He used to breed them for the seeing eye dogs, so we always had puppies around. The trick is to have kids around them as much as possible and let them pull, poke, dress-up, whatever little kids do to dogs, and be there at any sign of even the slightest flinch by the dog, and one firm "NO", will set them straight. The most dangerous part of her, is her tail. It's like a 5th leg. I have seen it clear a tea-party in one foul swoop. I have also had it knock over a number of freshly painted parts from time to time. But, u gotta love em. Sorry for the tangent lads. Back to the job at hand.....
__________________
Cheers
David

66 LWB Fleet (on hold)
64 LWB Fleet (daily driver)
65 SWB Fleet (almost finished as a driver)
64 SWB Fleet (just started - "Tommys Hot Rods" tribute truck)
Nothing worth doing, is easy.
irish1966 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:56 AM   #67
tapeworm
fan of "Butters" Stotch
 
tapeworm's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: St. Paul, MN
Posts: 267
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by fryer1979 View Post
I know it is not a truck, but it is a Chevy and it is a satin paint job. About 18 cans of Rustoleum Satin Black spray paint, and 5 1/2 cans of Rustoleum Satin White. All in a total of about two weekends worth of work, not counting the sanding to bare metal I did before applying the similar rattle can job that I did before this one. I'm pretty proud of my handy work for my zero body experience, and it was fairly cheep (less than $100 total). My only complaint is that it scratches fairly easy.
Actually, its funny you mention Rustoleum. I was talking with a body guy at my work, and he mentioned how he painted a car with the stuff. He sprayed it with a primer gun, no thinning. When it was first laid down, I guess it did not look very good. However, after two days of drying, the finish turned out great.
__________________
64 shortbox fleetside
replacing rusty junk with more junk, and one day to become a real truck again
tapeworm is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 10:56 AM   #68
Dan in Pasadena
Senior Member

 
Dan in Pasadena's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Glendora, CA
Posts: 6,344
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by tapeworm View Post
Actually, its funny you mention Rustoleum. I was talking with a body guy at my work, and he mentioned how he painted a car with the stuff. He sprayed it with a primer gun, no thinning. When it was first laid down, I guess it did not look very good. However, after two days of drying, the finish turned out great.
Interesting. I have heard Rustoleum has or maybe "had" fish oil in it and it would cause problems with your final paint. But I intend to strip to bare metal anyway when I finally get it painted
Posted via Mobile Device

Last edited by Dan in Pasadena; 10-28-2010 at 10:57 AM.
Dan in Pasadena is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 12:21 PM   #69
markeb01
Senior Enthusiast
 
markeb01's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Spokane Valley, WA
Posts: 8,356
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by Dan in Pasadena View Post

Maybe I'm overthinking it - What do you guys think? Even if it is (long term) temporary, I want it to look uniform and protect the metal as best I can. I suppose I could go to Harbor Freight and buy one of their cheap, but at least automotive-intended spray guns and their before-gun inline water separator. Opinions?
My truck had primer spots on it and looked blotchy for a long time. I just wanted it one color and had to be cheap since I was bringing in unemployment wages at the time. A nice enamel paint job will solve those problems.

If you’re going to shoot the truck with spray equipment, a water trap is mandatory, especially if you’re using a somewhat small compressor. They run almost constantly while spraying, get very hot and condense a great deal of water out of the air. It’s also cheap insurance to attach one of the plastic disposable water filters directly to the spray gun itself as well. They look something like this:

Amazon.com: 1 Disposable Mini Air/Water Filter... Amazon.com: 1 Disposable Mini Air/Water Filter...
Without water traps, it’s been my experience the gun will start spitting water droplets into the finish about 30 minutes into the paint job. Also try to use as short a hose as will reach and keep it off the floor as much as you can, as the cold floor can also condense moisture in the hose. Not sure what type spray gun you already have, but something automotive related will probably provide better results than something designed to paint fences or houses.

Undamaged air dry enamel will protect the metal for a many years, and in fact was one of the two industry standards for decades. The other being lacquer. The problem with using either of these paints today is if you eventually intend to repaint the vehicle using modern automotive paint. Whether the paint has fish oil as a component isn’t the issue. Modern catalyzed paints can attack and dissolve either of these older finishes, meaning (as you stated) everything has to go back to bare metal and start over. This isn’t a problem if you’re aware ahead of time. Who knows, like me, you might end up liking the cheap paint job enough you don’t have any interest in doing it over later.
markeb01 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:04 PM   #70
irish1966
Registered User
 
irish1966's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: hillsboro, oregon
Posts: 484
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by markeb01 View Post
My truck had primer spots on it and looked blotchy for a long time. I just wanted it one color and had to be cheap since I was bringing in unemployment wages at the time. A nice enamel paint job will solve those problems.

If you’re going to shoot the truck with spray equipment, a water trap is mandatory, especially if you’re using a somewhat small compressor. They run almost constantly while spraying, get very hot and condense a great deal of water out of the air. It’s also cheap insurance to attach one of the plastic disposable water filters directly to the spray gun itself as well. They look something like this:

Amazon.com: 1 Disposable Mini Air/Water Filter Only Standard 1/4" Threads, Fits most Spray Guns and Air Tools: Automotive

Without water traps, it’s been my experience the gun will start spitting water droplets into the finish about 30 minutes into the paint job. Also try to use as short a hose as will reach and keep it off the floor as much as you can, as the cold floor can also condense moisture in the hose. Not sure what type spray gun you already have, but something automotive related will probably provide better results than something designed to paint fences or houses.

Undamaged air dry enamel will protect the metal for a many years, and in fact was one of the two industry standards for decades. The other being lacquer. The problem with using either of these paints today is if you eventually intend to repaint the vehicle using modern automotive paint. Whether the paint has fish oil as a component isn’t the issue. Modern catalyzed paints can attack and dissolve either of these older finishes, meaning (as you stated) everything has to go back to bare metal and start over. This isn’t a problem if you’re aware ahead of time. Who knows, like me, you might end up liking the cheap paint job enough you don’t have any interest in doing it over later.
Great advice Markeb. How long do those filters last? I'm planning on experimenting with some rustoleum paint and I am just curious.
__________________
Cheers
David

66 LWB Fleet (on hold)
64 LWB Fleet (daily driver)
65 SWB Fleet (almost finished as a driver)
64 SWB Fleet (just started - "Tommys Hot Rods" tribute truck)
Nothing worth doing, is easy.
irish1966 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:35 PM   #71
fryer1979
Redneck Hillbilly
 
fryer1979's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Backwoods
Posts: 1,307
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by tapeworm View Post
Actually, its funny you mention Rustoleum. I was talking with a body guy at my work, and he mentioned how he painted a car with the stuff. He sprayed it with a primer gun, no thinning. When it was first laid down, I guess it did not look very good. However, after two days of drying, the finish turned out great.
I've been told that the rustoleum you can buy in the gallon cans actually sprays quite nicely. I've also read a few articles on using that paint with a roller. Sounds strange I know, but the photos I've seen along with the written up jobs seem to look pretty good. A buddy of mine just picked up a '77 Firebird that he wants to try the roller method on, it'll be an interesting experience. My job on the Camaro is 100% rattle can though, if I do it again I'm gonna get the gallon and use a real spray gun....I couldn'y use my finger for a few days after that paint job.
fryer1979 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:40 PM   #72
az65
Registered User
 
az65's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Casa Grande, AZ
Posts: 46
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by srsummers View Post
Thanks 62 Short Step

That's exactly what I was looking for. Has anyone every used Hot Rod Flatz? Would it be easier for a first timer to spray?
I have used it and it sprays fairly decent. I don't think you'll have any issues shooting it. It is way easier and better than rattlecanning it
__________________
'65 long-bed with 327/3spd
'05 SRT-10 quadcab
'69 Superbee clone
'66 Charger w/ 36k og miles
and a handful of bimmers
az65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:48 PM   #73
fryer1979
Redneck Hillbilly
 
fryer1979's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Backwoods
Posts: 1,307
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Quote:
Originally Posted by markeb01 View Post
It certainly looks cool. Nice layout and execution. And I like how personalized it is at a very affordable price. An inexpensive paint job can be very liberating. If I had a $5,000 paint job it would probably never leave the garage for fear of getting a chip or scratch.
I didn't catch this at first Mark, thanks! Unfortunately there is detail in the paint that the camera just can't pick up. I took a lot of time to run a small 1/4" or so stripe on both sides of the main larger stripe, trying to make it appear like the factory GM stripes from the 60's. I've done several rattle can jobs for myself and my friends, and I am actually quite proud of this one.

What you mentioned about not wanting to drive a car with a 5K paint job is exactly why I have been buying my own paint equipment lately. I have to drive my cars, to not would drive me insane, so by doing it myself I may never have a show car paintjob (not interested in that anyhow), but my paintjobs will be affordable and I will NEVER be afraid to drive it.

Also Mark: thanks for the link on those disposable filters, I've been looking for just that for a while now.

Last edited by fryer1979; 10-28-2010 at 01:53 PM.
fryer1979 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:50 PM   #74
LostMy65
But Found Her 25yrs Later!
 
LostMy65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oregon City, Oregon
Posts: 10,530
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

I've been considering a two-tone primer job.
Obviously the lower parts of my truck are where the rust issues are.
So here's what I'm thinking:
Rustoleum 'Rusty Metal' Primer Red along the lower bodyline where the fenders meet the hood, and tan/beige primer all above.

Does this sound dumb?
__________________
I lost my 65 - Found it 25 years later:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=426650

66 C20 Service Truck:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=428035
LostMy65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10-28-2010, 01:53 PM   #75
LostMy65
But Found Her 25yrs Later!
 
LostMy65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oregon City, Oregon
Posts: 10,530
Re: Pics of trucks in Primer Paint

Yes, that is exactly why I want to use primer.
It's a truck. I'm going to use it as a truck.
But it's also a cool classic, so I want it protected.
__________________
I lost my 65 - Found it 25 years later:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=426650

66 C20 Service Truck:
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...d.php?t=428035

Last edited by LostMy65; 10-28-2010 at 01:54 PM.
LostMy65 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:54 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com