by Scott Todd » Sun Aug 15, 2021 12:17 pm
This was all recommended by the local Auto Paint superstore. I bought small quantities to try it on control surfaces and was pleased with it. I don't know how it will last in the long run but I don't really care. I tell people I built a photogenic airplane, not a show one :)
I scrubbed the surface with scotch bright and Tide soap (granular). I also did some with Dawn and it seemed to work as well. I primed with Upol #8. It goes on quite well and is also available in spray cans for small areas or touch up. I used a basic Polyurethane at 4:1:1. After curing, it wet sands and seems to polish well. I did some small areas like the rudder to try to improve the slight orange peel and other blemishes I got early on. It ended up looking real nice but it took a LOT of polishing but probably not as much as bare aluminum. I decided to leave the rest of the airplane for now. It looks pretty good as-is.
I used a Harbor Freight $15 HVLP sprayer out in my driveway as shown above. I had the best results turning the air up quite high. I seem to remember the gun recommended 15-45 PSI and I was using about 60 at the gun. I also had the paint coming out fairly slow. The more I did, the less orange peel and runs. This was the first thing I ever painted other than small spray can jobs. I did two coats with the recommended 15 minutes between. The red is the same brand PolyU. I did all the paint early in the morning between 65-75 F. I could tell the difference in how it flowed out at less than 70. 65-70 was best. After sitting out for an hour, I moved the parts back into he garage and didn't touch them until the next day. The garage gets to about 90-95 in the daytime (Spring) and I think it helped cure the paint. It was always quite hard the next morning. in colder weather, I might wait two days. EDIT: I always painted in the shade of the house and tried to make sure the hour wait was also in the shade so I wouldn't get any uneven 'curing' or drying by the sun. It was usually right around sunrise.
I've painted two fabric airplanes but I like to tell people you can use a weed sprayer with Polytone and make it look good ;) Its really not painting as much as applying so I don't count that experience. In all, I spent about $500 for all the paint, supplies, guns, etc. I spent a few weeks working those few hours each morning. It was fun and I learned a lot but I don't look forward to painting another one.
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Last edited by
Scott Todd on Fri Jan 07, 2022 9:36 am, edited 1 time in total.