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Posted

hey all,
So where I live it's getting too cold outside to paint and winter is coming. Unfortunately living with my parents doesn't exactly help the situation haha or allow me to just build a paint booth in the house or garage.

Is there any solution to my problem here? any advice would be great!

thanks,
Steve


Posted

Yeah, get some bodies pre-painted, and then spend the winter polishing and then assembling them.

Or you could learn to polish bare plastic. I like to polish the raw plastic on a model if it's molded in a halfway decent color.

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Posted

Shake your paint up and walk outside spray your body and parts and come back inside. I do it all the time with my parts taped to cardboard. Do it for each coat. Randy B has done it with below freezing temps.

Posted

I have also done that Carl. I use a hair dryer to heat the plastic and paint then run outside spray one coat then put it in a warm place to flash off then repeat. Problem is you have to be quick. I have 2 cars in my collection that i have painted and cleared outside when it was 30 degrees that i have won awards with.

Posted

Warm up your spray can in a pot of warm water and then take it outside to spray it quickly. Otherwise, like others said, pre-paint your winter projects.

Posted

You could plan and prep projects all winter. Then paint like a mad man in the Spring and Summer!

Posted (edited)

I have also done that Carl. I use a hair dryer to heat the plastic and paint then run outside spray one coat then put it in a warm place to flash off then repeat. Problem is you have to be quick. I have 2 cars in my collection that i have painted and cleared outside when it was 30 degrees that i have won awards with.

Good advice James, easier to paint in the cold then the high humidity in Tennessee. I paint a few bodies up for the real bad weather. I have painted many around freezing.

Edited by slusher
Posted

Wouldn't using Acrylic Paint solve the Odor Problem? About the only problem would be if you used Alcahol to speed up the drying process and it's odor dissiapates fairly quick.

Posted

I would look around town & see if there's a body shop that would let you spray in their booth when it's not used.

This is a good idea because you could also get in good with whatever body shop and you could probably get a bunch of their left over paints on top of it!

Posted

Good advice James, easier to paint in the cold then the high humidity in Tennessee. I paint a few bodies up for the real bad weather. I have painted many around freezing.

Isn't that the truth! I hate painting in the summer here.

Posted

As others said, you can paint outside in the cold if you work quick. Why not just paint in the garage without a booth? Still cold, but a bit more sheltered. You could do so when nobody is home if fumes from the garage would make it into the home.

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