dino246gt Posted September 25 Posted September 25 Over the primer before the next layer of putty because the primer interacts with the putty. Clear, or any colour I suppose, I use clear mostly, creates a barrier.Β It works for me, maybe it's not the right thing to do, but it has saved me from doing putty, primer, putty, primer, over and over again. 1
customline Posted September 26 Author Posted September 26 9 hours ago, dino246gt said: Over the primer before the next layer of putty because the primer interacts with the putty. Clear, or any colour I suppose, I use clear mostly, creates a barrier.Β It works for me, maybe it's not the right thing to do, but it has saved me from doing putty, primer, putty, primer, over and over again. Hmmmm....π€.Β So it's the primer we all know and love? No π© ?Β Β π what have you found to be a good time delay between coats of barrier paint and primer? ...and primer never touches putty?Β Β Thanks, Dennis, I'll will try it your way at the first opportunity.Β
customline Posted September 26 Author Posted September 26 Hey! Here's a very cool deuce coupe I spotted at my breakfast haunt a few days ago. REALLYΒ look at it closely. IF I OWNED IT I WOULD NOT CHANGE A SINGLE THING..Β and how does it makeΒ YOU feel? I'mΒ reeeeealy likingΒ the nailhead buick under the open hood. Hardly any chrome. It's like this kid in 1954 took a $150.00 '32 coupe and removed the fenders, dropped the front, and dropped in the nailhead.Β It looks like a really old build but well cared for. It's friggin' sweet. π hey, I know, but itΒ is my thread. 4
Quiet Eric Posted Friday at 12:05 PM Posted Friday at 12:05 PM SinceΒ YOU asked.....π Can the cowl lights and fog light, swap the headlights for King Bees, put a proper set of Firestone 7.50 and 4.75 (maybe 5.00) tires on it, then give it a 3.5" haircut...that'd be pretty close.
customline Posted Friday at 12:44 PM Author Posted Friday at 12:44 PM 9 minutes ago, Quiet Eric said: SinceΒ YOU asked.....π Can the cowl lights and fog light, swap the headlights for King Bees, put a proper set of Firestone 7.50 and 4.75 (maybe 5.00) tires on it, then give it a 3.5" haircut...that'd be pretty close. Β I think this deuce is coolΒ because it still has all the "old fart" hardware on it.Β π And no bling! ....and maybe the original black paint, too. It looks like it was in a barn for the last 70 years under a tarp and dusted off and well..... anyway, that's how it hits me, QE. A survivor of sorts, but yes...a haircut would be nice....π€ Β 1
LennyB Posted Friday at 04:18 PM Posted Friday at 04:18 PM I would add some fenders so I have a place to put my βΒ while I'm jabbering with all the admirers.Β π Β Β (not really I just like the look with fenders better)
customline Posted Friday at 04:33 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:33 PM 10 minutes ago, LennyB said: I would add some fenders so I have a place to put my βΒ while I'm jabbering with all the admirers.Β π Β Β (not really I just like the look with fenders better) I thought I would get at least one guy to agree with me on this coupe. βΉ
TopherMcGinnis Posted Friday at 04:39 PM Posted Friday at 04:39 PM DUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!! I would Gray Baskerville that car DAILY! It is absolutely Perfect.Β
customline Posted Friday at 04:44 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:44 PM 3 minutes ago, TopherMcGinnis said: DUUUUUUUUDE!!!!!!!! I would Gray Baskerville that car DAILY! It is absolutely Perfect.Β See?Β SEE ?.....thank you Topher! (That didn't take very long π)Β
TopherMcGinnis Posted Friday at 04:48 PM Posted Friday at 04:48 PM It reminds me of a weekly car club meeting I attended back in '86. There were a couple of Dueces that came that looked alot like that Coupe.Β
customline Posted Friday at 04:58 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:58 PM 1 minute ago, TopherMcGinnis said: It reminds me of a weekly car club meeting I attended back in '86. There were a couple of Dueces that came that looked alot like that Coupe.Β It's not a wild, blown, weed burner....just a very polite, modest hot rod. No fancy paint job. No chrome plated axle or chrome plated shocks. Black windshield frame. Stock body. Fabric roof insert. Love it. 1
Mr. Metallic Posted Friday at 05:00 PM Posted Friday at 05:00 PM Here's my advice as far as the body work. I am no expert, but feel I get pretty decent results. I only use Tamiya filler for slight imperfections (less that a fingernail scratch) Tamiya filler tends to shrink for anything deeper than that unless it sits for a very long time. For anything deeper I use Dolphin Glaze (equivalent to Evercoat or 2 part Bondo). Using the plastic/solvent glue method can work but you have to be absolutely sure the glue is done curing or it will ghost. My practice anymore is to get all the bodywork done and then do the entire body with one coat of fine Tamiya primer. Then proceed to color. Others may have different experiences, but this is what works for me.
customline Posted Friday at 06:19 PM Author Posted Friday at 06:19 PM 1 hour ago, Mr. Metallic said: Here's my advice as far as the body work. I am no expert, but feel I get pretty decent results. I only use Tamiya filler for slight imperfections (less that a fingernail scratch) Tamiya filler tends to shrink for anything deeper than that unless it sits for a very long time. For anything deeper I use Dolphin Glaze (equivalent to Evercoat or 2 part Bondo). Using the plastic/solvent glue method can work but you have to be absolutely sure the glue is done curing or it will ghost. My practice anymore is to get all the bodywork done and then do the entire body with one coat of fine Tamiya primer. Then proceed to color. Others may have different experiences, but this is what works for me. Thanks, Craig. I use 2 part Bondo glazing for body work and have been using the Mr. Surfacer for minor nicks and scratches for many years now but only had a problem since I started using Tamiya lacquer color. I've been using their fine primer for years with mostly enamel like Testor's and MM.Β Β Between the tape issue and nowΒ this...(and I recently bought a dozen cans of Tamiya lacquer colorΒ before this little problem showed its ugly face.) it looks like I need to think it through better.
customline Posted Friday at 06:45 PM Author Posted Friday at 06:45 PM 4 minutes ago, TopherMcGinnis said: Createx is easy to use. So I've heard, Topher. I have a flight of Createx iridescent colors in a drawer that I've had for years and never tried. Some day....it may be too late, though. It's probably all dried up.
customline Posted Saturday at 09:28 PM Author Posted Saturday at 09:28 PM A little update....three steps forward, two steps backward π Due to the unusual amount of sanding (that's a b.s. excuse, Jimmy π₯΄) I found it had become necessary to restore the belt molding. The usual remedy was employed. Well.....how about a mock-up? π€ It always makes me feel better. But not much. π 4
LennyB Posted Saturday at 10:02 PM Posted Saturday at 10:02 PM Any remedy that makes you feel better is a good remedy. π
customline Posted Saturday at 11:35 PM Author Posted Saturday at 11:35 PM 1 hour ago, LennyB said: Any remedy that makes you feel better is a good remedy. π I was talking about the mock-up, Len, not the "usual remedy"; thatΒ made my head hurt. π£ 1
mchook Posted Monday at 12:08 AM Posted Monday at 12:08 AM A shame about the paint but you'll have it just how you want it soon.Β
customline Posted Monday at 01:19 PM Author Posted Monday at 01:19 PM 12 hours ago, mchook said: A shame about the paint but you'll have it just how you want it soon.Β Thanks for the encouragement, Mark, this is just normal stuff for me. As long as nature cooperates, I can move it forward. September is gone now so the atmosphere should dry out enough for painting soon.Β
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