My
friend Steve and I were sitting on the front porch one summer day in
1962 when Terry Brooks drove by in his '51 Chevyfastback. I was
astounded. When he'd bought it a few weeks earlier, it had been dingy
green with brown primer spots. Now, with shiny new orange enamel paint,
it looked beautiful. What a tremendous difference that paint job made!
In just a few weeks, Terry had transformed a faded old relic into a
thing of beauty.
More
than any other aspect of a car, paint enhances or detracts from its
appearance and value. This article and one to follow will de-mystify the
painting process and provide you with knowledge that will prove useful
whether you decide to attempt paint work yourself or hire a
professional.
Your
first step is to analyze the condition of your car's painted surface.
Dull finishes can often be restored to brilliance with polishes and
waxes. At least clean your car and take a good look at it. Problems such
as flaking, cracking, crazing, peeling, and pinholes are easy to spot
but can't be fixed without removing the old finish. If your car has
already been painted several times, strip off the old finishes and start
from bare metal.
Paint Removal Choices
How
do you remove old paint, primers, and fillers? Several methods include
sandblasting, media blasting, chemical removers (hot tanks), hand
stripping, power sanding, and grinding.
Sandblasting
is a quick, effective, and economical way to strip a painted metal
surface. Sandblasted metal also provides an excellent surface for
adherence of primers and fillers.
Still,
sandblasting has significant negative aspects. To avoid distorting and
stretching the metal, an operator must be thoroughly experienced with
sheet metal. I restored a 1955 300Sc that, in a previous shop, had its
hood sandblasted. It took me days to shrink the stretched areas back to
the correct contours. Another snag with sandblasting is work hardening
of the sheet metal surface. Sand grains hitting sheet metal have the
same effect as striking the panel with thousands of tiny hammers, making
the panel stiffer.
In
my opinion, sandblasting is unacceptable when a car is still assembled
because sand and dust migrate to every part of the car, getting into
bearings and mechanical components as well as every nook and cranny.
Years later you'll see sand fall out of hidden crevices. Sand grit
quickly destroys machined surfaces such as bearings and bushings. Even
if the parts are masked and sealed, grit will get in. I learned this the
hard way?early in my career I ruined a VW convertible using this
method.
Sandblasting
is good for removing rust and paint from heavy metal parts such as
castings and housings. It works great on things like bumper brackets or a
totally stripped chassis. Due to the possibility of warpage, it should
never be used on aluminum.
Media Blasting
Removing
paint by media blasting is increasingly popular. It's similar to
sandblasting with an important exception. Instead of sand, it uses
another media?hard plastic crushed to the consistency of sand. The same
material used for common plastic buttons, it is hard enough to remove
paint and primers yet has no effect on the metal surface beneath. I saw a
demonstration on a die-cast metal part that had been chrome-plated then
partially painted. Although the chrome was unprotected, the media blast
removed the paint without damaging the surface. With this method you'll
still have dust everywhere on an assembled car, but you won't have sand
grit to damage mechanical parts.
The
main drawback is that this process doesn't remove rust. The media isn't
hard enough to dry out rust. Several years ago I worked on the first
production 300SL Roadster. For this special car, we needed the least
destructive method to remove its paint. The media did an excellent job
without affecting the metal underneath. Still, surface rust in the lower
panels and wheel housings had to be removed with a small grinder and
wire brushes - very time consuming. Media blasting is also not very good
at removing plastic body fillers, which are best removed by a grinder.
Media blasting is somewhat more expensive than sandblasting due to the
higher cost of the media.
Chemical Removal
There
are several methods of chemical paint removal. Hot tank stripping, or
dipping, is an efficient way to strip bodies and parts. Dipping involves
immersing the body or part in a tank of hot caustic solution. The body
is submerged for several hours until paint and undercoating have
softened enough that they can be washed off with a strong stream of
water. The body is returned clean and de-rusted (the caustic also
attacks rust, effectively removing it), ready to be washed with a metal
conditioner and primed. The negative aspect of this process is that it
can't be used to strip aluminum. Visiting Harrah's restoration shop in
Sparks, Nevada, I arrived just as a painter was removing the remnants of
a 1928 RollsRoyce hood from their hot tank. Too late, they discovered
it was aluminum. The hood was 90-percent eaten by the caustic solution.
The
190SL and 300SL Roadster bodies, for example, can't be hot stripped due
to their aluminum cowl sections. The caustic solution will also oxidize
the surface of lead filler used by the factory to fit panels and edges
and fill imperfections and panel seams. Vintage Mercedes-Benz cars have a
lot of lead in their bodies. Oxidation makes a leaded surface chalky
and brittle, necessitating its removal and replacement. Re-leading is
time-consuming and expensive. To limit costs, many restorers elect to replace lead with plastic fillers.
A
caustic residue, trapped in nooks and crannies not thoroughly flushed
with clean water, will later cause failure of paint in affected areas.
Hand Stripping
Another
option involving chemicals is hand stripping. A chemical paint remover,
bought in quart or gallon cans, is brushed in liquid paste form onto a
painted surface. The paste is allowed to work a few minutes, then a
scraper or putty knife is used to remove the softened paint and
undercoating. Several applications are usually necessary to take off al1
the paint. Occasionally the bottom primer coats seem liffle affected by
the stripper and must be removed by sanding or grinding. Hand stripping
is a nasty business. The fumes are noxious, and the chemicals can burn
unprotected skin. Because it removes paint without damaging the panel,
hand stripping works well on aluminum, but it is less advantageous where
there is a lot of paint or filler on the panel. The stripper is
expensive and can require numerous applications.
Power Sanding
Our
final methods use sandpaper or grinding discs. A high-speed 7-in body
grinder with 16 or 24 grit grinding discs will quickly remove paint and
fillers. Unfortunately it removes metal, too. If an operator isn't
careful, deep scratches and gouges can occur. Sometimes excess heat
caused by friction can warp a panel. Never use a grinder to strip
aluminum panels.
Grinding
is best for removing small areas of paint that haven't responded to
other methods. Use care when grinding near chrome or glass; a grinder
throws off sharp hot particles at high speeds that can pit unprotected
areas.
Power
sanding is a paint removal method with few drawbacks. Dual action (DA)
sanders combine orbital and random motions, quickly grinding away paint
without the rough action and heat of a body grinder. Relatively soft
paint may gum or load up DA sandpaper quickly, but stripping with DA is
appropriate on any painted surface. It is only limited by where the DA
can reach with its round, flat disc. Probably the cheapest and safest
method if you attempt the stripping yourself, it requires only a DA
sander, minimal skill, and a large compressor (five hp or more).
Metal Conditioning
After
a surface has been completely stripped of paint, primer, and plastic
fillers, the next step is metal conditioning. On bare metal, rust forms
quickly. It is important to clean off this surface rust and be sure the
surface is chemically clean. To etch the surface for better paint
adhesion, use metal conditioner. Metal prep for steel, or aluma prep for
aluminum, is applied with a clean rag and immediately rinsed off with
cold water, then the surface is dried. The process is the same for
aluminum or steel. The metal should then be sprayed with a light coat of
primer to prevent rust. Improper use of metal conditioner can cause
paint failure later.
Next
time we'll discuss painting, including undercoatings, block sanding,
guide coats, sealers, top color coats, color sanding, compounding, and
final finishing.
Thanks to RM Auto Restorations in Chatham, Ontario, for help with photography.
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